Genus 79. Hexacontium, Haeckel,[[110]] 1881, Prodromus, p. 452.
Definition.—Shell with three concentric lattice-spheres and six simple spines of equal size.
The genus Hexacontium, the ancestral form of the Hexacontida, is probably derived from Hexalonche by duplication of the medullary shell. As in the latter, all six spines are of equal size, opposite in pairs in the three dimensive axes, and correspond therefore to the three equal axes of a tesseral crystal.
Subgenus 1. Hexacontanna, Haeckel.
Definition.—Pores of the cortical shell regular or subregular, of nearly equal size and similar form; surface smooth, without radial spines or papillæ (other than the six main spines).
1. Hexacontium phænaxonium, n. sp.
Cortical shell thin walled, smooth; its pores regular hexagonal, six to nine times as broad as the bars; twelve to sixteen on the radius. Radial proportion of the three spheres = 1 : 2 : 4. Both medullary shells of the same structure as the cortical shell, only with smaller pores. The three spheres connected by six thin radial beams, which are prolonged on the outside into six strong triangular pyramidal spines, as long as the radius of the cortical shell, and, at the base, as broad as one of its pores. (Differs from Hexastylus phænaxonius and from Hexalonche phænaxonia, Pl. [21], fig. 3, in the larger size and the triple shell.)
Dimensions.—Diameter of the outer sphere 0.2, middle 0.1, inner 0.05; cortical pores 0.008, bars 0.0012; length of the spines 0.1.
Habitat.—Central Pacific, Station 270, surface.
2. Hexacontium axotrias, n. sp. (Pl. [24], fig. 3).