4 Brack. 
BRACHIOPODA. 
II.— ANATOMY AND MISCELLANEOUS. 
Some points in the anatomy of Lingula anatina ; FRAN901S (17). 
Circulation in Lingula anatina ; Francois (17). 
Development ; Beecher (1). 
All Brachiopods have a common form of embryonic shell — the prote- 
gulum ; Beecher ( 1 ). 
Methods employed at the Zoological Station at Naples for the preserva- 
tion of marine animals ; Lo Bianco, Bull. Sci. Fr. Belg. xxiii [ Brachio - 
poda~\ p. 142. — List of figured specimens of fossil Brachiopoda in York 
Museum; Rep. Yorks. Phil. Soc. 1890, pp. 62-64. — Catalogue of Brachio- 
poda in his collection ; Paetel (28). 
Ill— DISTRIBUTION. 
A.— GEOGRAPHICAL. 
Lusitanian Province. 
Brachiopoda of the Travailleur and Talisman Expeditions, 21 species ; 
Fischer & CEhlert (16).— Spanish peninsula ; Hidalgo (26).— French 
coasts ; Locard (27). 
West African Province. 
Senegal, 3 species ; Dautzenberg (12). 
Indo-Pacific Province. 
Indo-China, 2 species of Lingula cited ; Fischer ( 15 ). 
Philippines, Terebratulina kiiensis , n. sp., or var. ; Dall & Pilsbry (10). 
Austro- Zelandic Province. 
Tasmania: list of species; Johnston, P. R. Soc. Tasm. 1890, p. 151. 
Japanese Province. 
Japan: recent species ( Eudesia raphaelis , n. sp.); Dall & Pilsbry (11). 
B.— GEOLOGICAL. 
Madagascar, list of the known fossil forms ; Ant. Annual, xiv, 
P . 243. 
Cracow, fossil forms near ; ZaReCZNY, Sprawozd. Kom. fizyjogr. xxiii, 
pp. 29-32, & xxv, pp. 103 & 104. 
Tertiary of Turin, with derived Mid. Lias fossils ; Parona (29). — 
Lower Pliocene of Borzoli ; Campana (8 ). 
