LAMELLIBRANCHIA TA. 
107 
Pterinopeden Icdus, but it is a larger and coarser form, with the right valve con¬ 
vex. The geological positions of the two species are quite different. The 
character of the surface ornamentation distinguishes it from Pterinea prora and 
Pterinea avis. 
Forma,tion and locality. In shales of the Chemung group, 600 feet above the 
base of the formation, at Ithaca, N. Y. 
ACTINOPTERIA, Hall. 
Actinopteria eximia. 
PLATE XXV, FIG. 1. 
Actinopteria eximia, Hall. Pal. N. Y., vol. v, pt. 1. Plates and Explanations: PI. 25, fig - . 1. Jan., 1883. 
Shell small, rhomboidal; body falciform, very oblique; length more than one- 
third greater than the height; margin broadly curved along the ventral 
side and abruptly recurved over the posterior end. 
Left valve convex. Right valve unknown. 
Hinge-line straight, less than the length of the valve. 
Beak acute, directed forward. Umbonal angle about 60°. 
Ear short, oblique, limited by a distinct sulcus; margin convex; extremity 
rounded. Wing imperfectly preserved in the specimen described, apparently 
joining the body near the middle of the post-cardinal slope, and very strongly 
defined; margin concave, extending acutely backwards; extremity acute. 
Test marked by about twenty strong, elevated slender rays, with regular 
lamellae of growth which are extended and bent backwards on crossing the 
rays, producing strong semi-tubular spines. The cardinal expansions pre¬ 
serve only the lines of growth. 
Interior unknown. 
The specimen described has a length of 20 mm., and height of 14 mm. 
The description is made from the figure given on plate xxv, as the specimen 
cannot be found at the time of this writing. The characters of form and surface 
ornamentation are very characteristic, and the species is important as being the 
