. Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution . Fig. 13.—A Ceratiine (Cryptupsaras couesii). After Jordan and Evcrmann. found in the Atlantic (lat. 38° 18 N., long. 68° 24 W.) at a depthof 1,686 Fig. 1-1.—A Ceratiine (Manculiaa shujcldtii). After Jordan and Evormann. In Mancalias the frontal spine is abbreviated and supported bya long exserted rodlike interspinal. The combination remindsone of a long rod with a short line baited atthe end. There is no second spine, but in itsplace is a pair of pedunculate caruncles. Onesjiecies, M. uranoscopus^ was originally
. Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution . Fig. 13.—A Ceratiine (Cryptupsaras couesii). After Jordan and Evcrmann. found in the Atlantic (lat. 38° 18 N., long. 68° 24 W.) at a depthof 1,686 Fig. 1-1.—A Ceratiine (Manculiaa shujcldtii). After Jordan and Evormann. In Mancalias the frontal spine is abbreviated and supported bya long exserted rodlike interspinal. The combination remindsone of a long rod with a short line baited atthe end. There is no second spine, but in itsplace is a pair of pedunculate caruncles. Onesjiecies, M. uranoscopus^ was originally madeknown from a specimen brought from a depthof 2,400 fathoms in the mid-Atlantic; an-other, M. shufeldtii^ was discovered in thenot far from the American coast at a depth of 372
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Keywords: ., bookauthorsmithsonianinstitutio, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840