200 
MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
68. Nilson’s Deepsea Dogfish, Centrophorus nilsoni Thompson. Three and a-half feet. 
69. Waite’s Deepsea Dogfish, Centrophorus waitei Thompson. About 1 foot long. 
70. Deep-sea Dogfish, Centrophorus harrissoni McCulloch. Nearly 3 feet. 
71. Endeavour Dogfish, Centrophorus scalpratus McCulloch. Three feet. 
72. Long-snouted Dogfish, Deaniops quadrispinosus (McCulloch). Four feet. Probably 
viviparous. Harmless. 
73. Black Shark, Scymnorhinus phillippsi Whitley. Four feet. Viviparous ( see Parker, 
Trans. N. Z. Inst, xv, 1882 (1883), pp. 222-234, pis. xxxi-xxxii). Harmless. 
74. Bramble Shark, Echinorhinus ( Rubusqualus ) mccoyi Whitley. Over 7 feet. Harmless. 
75. Luminous Shark, Lexus ferox Kner. Type about 7 in. long, but grows larger. Harmless. 
76. Leiche, Euprotomicrus bispinatus (Quoy and Gaimard). {Small and harmless. Recorded 
from New Zealand by Hutton on the basis of jaws which have since been lost 
(Phillipps). 
77. Sherwood’s Shark, Scymnodon sherwoodi Archey. About 3 feet. Harmless. 
78. Frill-gilled Shark, Chlamydoselachus sp. Only known from Stead’s identification of some 
decomposed remains from Port Jackson which do not appear to have been 
preserved. 
79. Angel Shark, Squatina australis Regan. Five feet. Viviparous. Harmless. 
80. Ornate Angel Shark, Squatina tergocellata McCulloch. About 1| feet. Probably 
viviparous. Harmless. The New South Wales form belongs to a new subspecies. 
81. Saw Shark, Pristiophorus cirratus (Latham). Four feet. Viviparous, the rostral teeth 
of the embryo lie flat against the sides of the snout before birth. Harmless. 
82. Southern Saw Shark, Pristiophorus nudipinnis Gunther. Four feet, very similar to 
P. cirratus. 
