FORAMINIFERA FROM DEEP WELLS 6I Lepidocyclina sp. ? Fragments of Lcpidocyclina which are not identifiable were obtained at numerous wells indicated in the previous report (1r2th Annual Report, 1919). These are too small and too poorly preserved to be of more than generic value. FAMILY MILIOLIDA E. Genus Quinqueloculina d'Orbigny, 1826. Quinquelocilina cf. poeyana d'Orbigny. Quinqueloculina poeyana d'Orbigny, in De la Sagra, Hist. Fis. Pol. Nat. Cuba, "Foraminiferes," 1839, p. 191, pl. ii, figs. 25-27. Cushman, Bull. 676, U. S. Geol. Survey, 1918, p. 24, pl. 6, fig. 2. A specimen from 41-56 feet in the well of the Okeechobee Ice and Electric Company at Okeechobee, has a sculpture consisting of longitudinal costae, somewhat similar to that figured in the references given above. The specimen from the well,is, however, somewhat broader and shorter, and may not belong to this species. Specimens with similar sculpture but of different shape more like Q. pulchella d'Orbigny, occur in the. well at Marathon on Key Vaca, at a depth of 1,140 feet. By their appearance they may have come from the sides of the well far above this point as -they are excellently preserved and do not look like, other material from this depth. Quinqueloculina sp. Plate 3, figure 3. There is a fairly large species found in several of the wells which is very peculiar in its sculpture. The exterior is either rough or covered with a secondary granular coating. Where this is worn through, a peculiar sculpture is seen, consisting of short longitudinal elongate pits filled with fine granular material of the surface. Specimens are not well enough preserved to show the apertural characters. The species occurs with the conical form of Orbitolina in the following wells: New City Well at Jacksonville, at a -depth of 845-900 feet; Poice de Leon Well at St. Augustine, at 440 feet;