424 Dr. J. Gwyn Jeffreys on XLII. — New and peculiar Mollusca of the Pecten, Mjtilus, and Area Families procured in the ' Valorous ' Expedition. By J. GvvYN Jeffreys, LL.D., F.R.S. PectinidsB. Pecten fragilis^ ^ Jeffr. Shell roundisb, equilateral, much compressed or flattened, excessively thin and brittle, of a paper-like consistency, semi-transparent, rather glossy, and somewhat iridescent : sculpture^ in the upper valve 15-20 concentric ribs or undulating folds, which do not extend to the sides, besides numerous longi-tudinal fine and raised stria3, "which latter radiate from the beak and cover the whole surface ; the sides are otherwise marked by close-set lines of growth only ; the lower valve has a few slight concentric I'ibs, but no longitudinal stria3 : colour silvery-white : margins semicircular in front, and sloping gradually towards the hinge-line, below which on each side there is a gentle curve or depression : heahs very small and rather prominent : ears small but broad, equal in size, right-angled : hinge-line straight : cartilage-pit very small, triangular : hinge-plate broad and smooth : inside pearly : muscular scars \\\Q,o\\'&y\Q,\\.(m.'&. L. 0*35. B. 0*35. 'Valorous' Expedition: Station 9, 1750 fathoms ; St. 12, 1450 fathoms ; St. 16, 1785 fathoms. Norwegian Expedi-tion, 1876, 1000-1500 fms. Fragments only. This species belongs to the section or subgenus Pseudamus-sium of Klein, along with Pecten grmnlandiciis, P. vitreus, and P. similis. A specimen from 1450 fathoms is permeated by the same curious branching sponge (?) or organism that infests so many shells from deep water and has been considered a Fungus by some naturalists. Genus AMUSSiUMf, {Amusium) Bumphius. Shell inequivalve, more or less circular, flattened, smooth or variously sculptured, furnished inside with slight ribs, which radiate from the hinge and are not impressions of outside markings, but are quite irrespective of them. The institution of this genus has been attributed by every author to Klein ; but Bumphius (the " Plinius Indicus ") has precedence of him by nearly half a century. The type of * Brittle. t Sometliing exactly and evenly planed.