several species of aiaphipods, an ieopod, atai or 5 species of sea squirts 
(ascldlans) « 
The dredge haul of l&rch 1, on our return to Arthur Harbor was a 
repeat of the earlier one with a host of anrselld wonas and ojollusks. 
The fish trapping was equally rewarding, 68 notothoniid fish were 
taken In two sets off Janus Island together with starfish and neu^rtean 
wornjs. The fish mi^d from 7 to Ih^ inches in length. One trap set in 
the rocky part of Bonaparte Inlet was cnished under a siaall berg that 
either drifted in with the tide or possibly was calved off during the night 
frora the ice cliffs lining one side of the head of the inleti considerable 
sea weed aM a large cliEBp of ascidiane were dislodged as we got the 
4anjE®d trap up after socie hours* labor, dried in foi^noon, were successful 
with a grapiel in the afternoon. 
Brash-ice troubled our March 1 landing at the Base H site, recent 
snows had whitemd the ground and the large lake a few hundred yards behijid 
the hut was thln-lce covered, as were the fresh-water pools on the top 
of the bluff above the hut. A few lonesome-looking Adelies were standing 
on the sea-ward side of the bluff j skvias were about but in lesser nusfoers 
than in Jantmy. Where do tl'^y go; migrate as do the penguins? Tor^son 
Island was all but deserted, Just a scattering of penguins about, 
Tm approaches to Ai'thur Harbor, because of tlje current nmning 
through it, is said to be quite free of sea-ice more or less the year round. 
Regrettably during the January two-hour squall we experienced in 
Arthur Harbor, we did not get to see the Inlet j it is a remarkably protected 
