Page:Scientific results HMS Challenger vol 18 part 1.djvu/520

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312
THE VOYAGE OF THE H.M.S. CHALLENGER.

3. Druppocarpus chamaerops, n. sp.

Cortical shell thin walled, with irregular, roundish, or subcircular pores of very different size, twice to six times as broad as the thin bars; eight to twelve on the half equator. Between them arise numerous thin, bristle-like radial spines, about half as long as the equatorial axis, and equal to the diameter of the spherical medullary shell; pores of the latter subregular, circular, very small. (Resembles Prunocarpus artocarpus, Pl. 39, fig. 5, but differs in the simple spherical medullary shell.)

Dimensions.—Major axis 0.12, minor 0.09; meshes 0.005 to 0.02, bars 0.003; length of the radial spines 0.05; diameter of the medullary shell 0.04.

Habitat.—Mediterranean, in the Strait of Gibraltar, Algesiras, Haeckel, surface.


4. Druppocarpus borassus, n. sp.

Cortical shell thick walled, with irregular, roundish, or subcircular pores, three to five times as broad as the bars; twelve to fifteen on the half equator. Irregularly scattered on the surface about twenty to thirty short conical spines; their length equals their basal breadth and the diameter of the largest pores. Medullary shell ellipsoidal, half as large as the cortical.

Dimensions.—Major axis 0.1, minor 0.08; pores 0.006 to 0.01, bars 0.002; length and thickness of the radial spines 0.01; axes of the medullary shell 0.05 and 0.04.

Habitat.—Pacific, central area, Station 268, depth 2900 fathoms.


5. Druppocarpus corypha, n. sp.

Cortical shell thick walled, with irregular, funnel-like, roundish pores, scarcely as broad as the bars; sixteen to twenty on the half equator. Irregularly scattered on the surface about fifteen to twenty three-sided pyramidal radial spines, half as long as the equatorial axis, and as the diameter of the medullary shell.

Dimensions.—Major axis 0.17, minor 0.14; pores and bars 0.003 to 0.009; length of the radial spines 0.08; diameter of the medullary shell 0.09.

Habitat.—Fossil in the Tertiary rocks of the Nicobars, Haeckel.


Genus 133. Prunulum,[1] n. gen.

Definition.Druppulida with simple ellipsoidal cortical shell and double medullary shell; without spines or polar tubes.

The genus Prunulum differs from Druppula in the double (not simple) medullary shell, which is sometimes spherical, sometimes ellipsoidal; it may be derived either from Druppula by duplication of the medullary shell, or from Thecosphæra by prolongation of one axis.


  1. Prunulum = Little-plum.