2. Stephanium tetrapus, n. sp.

Ring elliptical, without edges, thorny, with a stout, thorny apical horn of the same length. Four feet curved and irregularly branched, divergent, of different size. The two sagittal feet (the anterior sternal and posterior caudal) about as long as the ring. The two lateral feet (right and left) nearly twice as long, more richly branched.

Dimensions.—Height of the ring 0.16, breadth 0.11; length of the feet 0.15 to 0.3.

Habitat.—Central Pacific, Station 272, depth 2600 fathoms. Fossil in Barbados.

Family XLIX. Semantida, n. fam.

Definition.—Stephoidea with a single vertical ring (the primary sagittal ring), bearing on its base a horizontal ring (basal or cortinar ring) with two to four or more basal gates (or cortinar pores).

The family Semantida differs from the preceding Stephanida in the development of a small horizontal ring on the base of the primary vertical sagittal ring. By the crossing of these two rings a small latticed basal plate is formed, with one or two pairs of pores; rarely with a greater number of "basal pores." The production of this characteristic "basal plate" is of the greatest morphological importance, as the beginning of the numerous different lattice-formations, which are differentiated in the great majority of Nassellaria.

In my Prodromus (1881, p. 446) I had enumerated the Semantida with three genera (Nos. 298 to 300) as a separate subfamily of the Dyostephida or "Stephoidea biannularia," and characterised these "Dyostephanida" by the following definition: "Skeleto annulis duobus composito, qui in duobus planis invicem perpendicularibus jacent; altero annulo (sagittali) verticali, altero (basali) horizontali." As the names there given were already employed with another signification, and as the Zygostephanida (there united with the Dyostephanida) are more closely related to the Coronida, I now change the names, and propose to call the family Semantida, expressing by this term the typical similarity of the skeleton to a signet-ring (Semantis, Semantrum, Semantidium).

At about the same time, some Stephoidea of this family were accurately described by Bütschli (1882, Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zool., vol. xxxvi. p. 495, Taf. xxxii. figs. 6, 7, 8). He called them Stephanolithis, a name which Ehrenberg had employed, not for complete shells of Radiolaria, but for isolated parts of such, and for siliceous fragments of different skeletons, needles of Sponges, &c. The three species described by Bütschli represent three different genera of our Semantida, viz., Semantis spinescens (with two gates in the basal plate), Semantrum mülleri (with four gates), and Semantidium haeckelii (with six gates). He pointed out the great morphological value of the fenestrated basal plate and its paired gates, as beginnings of numerous other Nassellaria. But his opinion, that in all Spyroidea and Cyrtoidea, derived from these, two pairs of basal gates were constant, was erroneous, nor was the formation of the first pair naturally explained; he supposed that the formation of the basal plate begins by development of an odd sagittal apophysis, arising from the base of the primary sagittal ring. But this odd sagittal apophysis ("der unpaare mediane Kieselfortsatz c1", loc. cit., p. 497) is in reality not a primary and essential part of the skeleton, but secondary and of little morphological value, absent in the majority of the Semantida and of the other Nassellaria.

We divide our family Semantida into two different subfamilies, which possibly possess a direct phylogenetic relation to the two subfamilies of Stephanida:—The Semantiscida have no typical feet, and have arisen directly from the Lithocircida; the Cortiniscida, however, possess the three typical basal feet of Cortina, and may therefore be derived directly from the Cortinida. Since these three cortinar feet are probably identical with the three primary radial rods of the Plectoidea, an immediate affinity also to these Nassellaria is indicated.