130 
ACTINOPTEEYGll. 
P. 8687. Another imperfect large specimen. Purchased , 
49495 P. 92. Two well-preserved fishes about 0-045 in 
Pseudoberyx 
1866. Pseudobe: 
Mt. 1 " 
i bottse, Pictet & Humbert. 
■ Itech-Pob*-* 083 - 
seudobcry.v bottce, Pictet & Humbert, Nouv 
- Libal b P- 34, pi. ii. fi K . 7 . 
(?) 1887 Pseudoberyx bottce. .1 w 
vol. : 
W Dn.vi 
n:„ GJnC 
r*/l 
Type.. Nearly complete fish ; Geneva Museum. , , in ,] 
, A a P ec ' es about as largo as the type, similarly ornamen i 
■«ith similar scales and fins, but with less deepened trunk. 0 f 
of head with opercular apparatus exceeding the maximum < C P 
the trunk, and contained about twice in the length fr° m 
pectoral arch to the base of the caudal fin. 
Porn,. 4- Loc. Upper Cretaceous : Hakel, Mt. Lebanon. ^ ^ 
P- 114. Imperfect specimen nearly 0-075 in length. LeWlS 
Pseudoberyx grandis, Davis. ^ ^ 
1887. Pseudoberyx grandis, J. W. Davis, Trans. Roy. Dublin S 
vol. iii. p, 610, pi. xxviii. fig. 4. 
Type. Nearly complete fish ; British Museum. 
A comparatively large species, known only by the uni'P 1 ^ 
specimen. External ornamentation apparently feeble, * ,n 
pectination of the scales extremely delicate. Length of ‘ ^ 
opercular apparatus about equal to the maximum depth 0 f r0 m 
trunk and contained one and a half times in the '. t ype 
the pectoral arch to the base of the caudal fin. Fins as in 1 
species. 
form. 4 - Loc. Upper Cretaceous : Hakel, Mt. Lebanon. 
P- 4753. Type specimen 0-17 in length, described and ^ 
Davis, loc. cit. The frontal bones are finely a0 
behind. The pelvic fins are crushed together * ,|g r0 js n° 
a false impression of the number of rays ; and ^ p e 
evidence of an anterior spine. The scales slli a 
somewhat abraded, and most of those preserve g DS 
smooth posterior border; hut a few behind the 1 
seem to exhibit traces of an original very fi nc P®° . q 0 h. 
Jj&W* 
