. Alaska ... Natural history; Scientific expeditions. ment of the abdomen; not carinated behind gastric tooth; outline much as in the preceding, as are also the eyes and antennae. Second to sixth abdominal segments inclusive carinate; telson very nearly as long as the sixth segment, less deeply notched than in Pasiphcea corteziana. The side view strongly resembles that of P. corteziana, from which the carinated ab- domen and shorter carapace without median carina at once distinguish it. Z'/wd-z/^/^^J.—Length of male67 mm.,length ^ ^ ^ ., ^. c " Fig. 6. Pasi/>ka:a affinis. Sta- of carap


. Alaska ... Natural history; Scientific expeditions. ment of the abdomen; not carinated behind gastric tooth; outline much as in the preceding, as are also the eyes and antennae. Second to sixth abdominal segments inclusive carinate; telson very nearly as long as the sixth segment, less deeply notched than in Pasiphcea corteziana. The side view strongly resembles that of P. corteziana, from which the carinated ab- domen and shorter carapace without median carina at once distinguish it. Z'/wd-z/^/^^J.—Length of male67 mm.,length ^ ^ ^ ., ^. c " Fig. 6. Pasi/>ka:a affinis. Sta- of carapace 22 mm. tion 2919. «. Teison (x aJ)- *• Type ^t3X Cortez Bank, Calif., Hand of second pair (x.). lat. 320 17' 00" N., long. 1190 17' 00" W., 984 fathoms {Albatross station 2919). Genus Parapasiphae Smith. PARAPASIPH^ SERRATA Rathbun. Parapasiphce serrata Rathbun, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxiv, 904, 1902. Carapace and rostrum as long as the first five abdominal somites. The median carina extends backward to the posterior fifth of the cara-. FiG. 7. Parapasiphce serrata. ? (X about i^). Station 2919. pace or the cervical groove, and forward along the high thin rostrum which reaches half way along the eye-stalks; the carina is a little concave at the middle of the carapace and anteriorly slopes downward, and is armed with i6 small teeth or spines, two of which are on the rostrum and one is terminal; below this spine the rostrum is a compressed, finely crenulate lobe. Orbital and antennal angles blunt. There is a small spine just behind the orbital angle, and another still farther back in a. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Harriman Alaska Expedition (1899); Harriman, Edward Henry, 1848-1909; Merriam, C. Hart (Clinton Hart), 1855-1942; Washington Academy of Sciences (Wash


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnatural, bookyear1901