. 70° 60° 50° Fig. I. Chart of the Falkland Islands and adjacent seas, showing positions where Foraminifera were obtained. 230. TS511. BIV. 5. V. 27. 53° 17' 00" S, 60° 25' 00" W. Baillie sounding rod, 675 m. Fifteen cc. of tenacious grey mud which was reduced to less than 0-5 cc. when washed on 200 mesh silk. The residue consisted of a few large sand grains, a few pyritic casts, and Foraminifera, mostly broken shells, Glohigerinae and Uvigerinae being dominant. A good many species were recorded, many represented by a single specimen. Among the rarer forms were Anomalina iimbili- cat


. 70° 60° 50° Fig. I. Chart of the Falkland Islands and adjacent seas, showing positions where Foraminifera were obtained. 230. TS511. BIV. 5. V. 27. 53° 17' 00" S, 60° 25' 00" W. Baillie sounding rod, 675 m. Fifteen cc. of tenacious grey mud which was reduced to less than 0-5 cc. when washed on 200 mesh silk. The residue consisted of a few large sand grains, a few pyritic casts, and Foraminifera, mostly broken shells, Glohigerinae and Uvigerinae being dominant. A good many species were recorded, many represented by a single specimen. Among the rarer forms were Anomalina iimbili- catiila, , and Virgulina schreibersiana, var. spinosa, 235. TS 498. C III. 29. V. 27. 50° 45' 00" S, 56° 18' 30" W. Baillie sounding rod, 600 m. About 9 cc. of grey mud, reduced to 2 cc. by washing on 200 mesh silk sieve, yielded quite a number of interesting species, including Lagena qiiadralata, spinous specimens of Nodosaria laevi- gata and A^. rotundata, and Uvigerina angulosa var. pauperata,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, booksubjectocean, booksubjectscientificexpediti