armed GDRnARD. ’ gg 
'Wch o„ flg„e 
th,t i, very 
which it is able to accomnT e e water, 
an air-bladder of more tLn ord’^ 
bottom, its restlesr motbn 
stones, causes the breaking off of v 
processes of the snout Its f rl Ti projecting 
and sea-weeds. molluscous animals, worms, 
terranean it is sai^to g'tw tf^o^bl ^T’ ''' 
example measured eleven inches'" of th' T\ 
Projected to the extent of an inch I T 
the length of the snout was .re^’ ^ e“' specimen 
oval, high on the side of the head 
to the root of the bifurcation of th’ ^ 
vongh by several pointed tubercles 'Te 
■«^ith a formidable border of sn’ ’ e ‘^P^vt, 
spine behind each eye, and a broaT^' serrated 
on the gill-covers; a third below witri ""•^1^’'^''' v 
ike a lateral continuance of each branch f appears 
spines and the cheek-plates m. E ^ '^bese 
i;he line of the mouth cimdlr ^^th_ p-anular elevations, 
filaments hang from the chin 
octangular form by a series of nl^^ 
ofige in the middle, by which mil ^""Ie ® ^ sharply-raised 
become toothed like a saw. The ZT lines 
forms on each side a border lo thf T' f i^es 
and begins close to the head • an 1 lE dorsal fins 
»« a ,le,.4c, Ponyproci at- 
111 13r. Moore’s figure the dorsal Z . tail, 
ray IS the longest; the fin gradually si ^rst 
tail, which latter organ is J backward to near 
Yarrell, with (in Dr. Moore’s fishl M^. 
the membrane. ^ “e rays projecting beyond 
-cl .ire hr., hor.al h,r U repre!tj^“ ; 
