FORAMINIFERA. 
Prot. 55 
p. 595, pi. 13, fig. 11, described, Penard (337) ; C. pellucidum, minute 
structure of, and varieties of pseudopodia in, Faur^-Fremiet (129) 
pp. 497-499 ; C. p., 2 varieties distinguished, var. putrinum a nov. and 
var. putrinum (3 nov., also occurrence of fuchsinophilous grains de- 
scribed, representing an internal secretion, id. (130) pp. 905-907 ; 
C. p., full detailed account of, id. (138) pp. 1-68, pis. 1 & 2, 21 
text-figg. 
Difflugia ampullula n. sp., occurrence and note on, ZachariAs (511) 
p. 228; D. lobostoma , p. 14, var. impressa n. var., p. 15, pi. 1, figg. 
11-14, D.urceolatav ar. quadrialatarv. var., p. 17, pi. 1, fig. 15, var. ventri- 
cosa n. var., p. 17, pi. 1, fig. 16, Paraguay, diagnosed, v. Daday (99) ; 
D. piriformis , remarks on, Penard (337) p. 596, pi. 13, figg. 12-14 ; 
D. prestans n. sp., p. 25, 1 fig., D. elongata n. sp., p. 33, 1 fig., Swisfi 
lakes, diagnosed, Penard (338) ; D. (n. sp.?) from Loch Ness, note on, 
Penard (334) p. 699, text-fig. 1. 
Dinamoeba mirabilis, notes on, Penard (337) p. 690, pi. 13, figg. 8-10. 
Entamoeba (histolytica, judging from cultural characters) of dysentery, 
successfully cultivated, Lesage (259) pp. 9-16, pis. 1 & 2 ; E. [?] 
undulans n. sp., remarkable for the possession of an undulating 
membrane, occurrence and note on, Castellani (64) pp. 67-69, text- 
figg. 3-5. [It is by no means unlikely that an abnormal form of 
Trichomonas is in question.] 
Nebela bicornis n. sp., plankton, Scottish lochs, diagnosed, West (503) 
p. 91, 1 text-fig. ; N. bigibbosa , remarks on, Penard (337), p. 600, 
pi. 13, figg. 16-19. 
“ Ouramceba,” really an ordinary Amoeba (spp. var.) on which certain 
Fungal filaments ( Entomophthoraceoe or Saprolegniacece) are ecto- 
parasitic, Penard (337) pp. 585-588, pi. 13, figg. 1-6. 
Paulinella chromatophora , description of, chiefly with regard to the 
structure of the shell, and the chromatophores, Penard (337) 
pp. 603-610, pi. 14, figg. 20-28 ; P. c ., occurrence Virginia, U.S.A., 
and notes on, Kepner (209) pp. 128 & 129, 1 fig. 
Pelom,yxa palustris , study of the symbiotic Bacteria (Cladothrix pdo- 
myxoe n. sp.) and the refringetit bodies and their importance, in, 
Veley (496) pp. 374-395, pis. 36-38 ; P. penardi n. Sp., occurrence 
and diagnosis, Rhumbler (376) p. 50, text-figg. 2, 6, 10, 11. 
Placocysta jurassica n. sp., diagnosis and occurrence, Penard (337) 
p. 611, pi. 14, figg. 29 & 30. 
Quadrula irregularis , remarks on, Penard (337) p. 559, pi. 13, fig. 15. 
(b) Foraminifera : — 
Arenaceous Foraminifera, comprehensive account of morphology of, and 
general conclusions arrived at, Kemna (207) pp. xi-xlviii. 
Foraminifera from : — Bermuda Banks (shoal-water deposits), Bigelow 
(24) ; shore-sand, Bognor, Sussex, Earland (119) ; Norwegian fiords, 
listed, Nordgaard (321) p. 192) ; East Finmark, Norman (322) ; 
Island of Delos (Grecian Archipelago), Sidebottom (442). 
t Foraminifera, mostly lists, from : — Pleistocene clays, Taranto (Terra 
d’Otranto), Bassani (14) p. 57 ; Upper Eocene, Vicentin, Num- 
mulites and Orthophragmina in abundance, corresponding with those 
at Biarritz, Boussac (36) ; Miocene, Santo (New Hebrides), Chap- 
man (78) ; Eocene (Nummulitic limestone), Depts. Audeand H^rault, 
notes on, Doncieux (104) ; Tertiaries, Borneo, noted and tabulated, 
Douvill6 (113) ; Pliocene (or Recent), Rimini (Adriatic), notes on, 
and figures from d’Orbigny (“ Planches incites ”), Fornasini (146) ; 
Irish Greensand, Gough (161) } Glacial deposits (Cretaceous and 
Tertiary forms), Frankfurt a O., Hucke (186) ; Cretaceous (Gault), 
Bartin (Pomerania), id. (187) ; Miocene and Cretaceous, deep-boring 
