In a 21 cm neutral hydrogen survey of approximately 55 sq deg out to a
redshift of cz=8340 km/s, we have identified 75 extragalactic HI sources. These
objects comprise a well-defined sample of extragalactic sources chosen by means
that are independent of optical surface brightness selection effects. In this
paper we describe the Arecibo survey procedures and HI data, follow-up VLA HI
observations made of several unusual sources, and Kitt Peak B-, R-, and I-band
photometry for nearly all of the galaxies. We have also gathered information
for some of the optically detected galaxies within the same search volume. We
examine how samples generated by different types of search techniques overlap
with selection by HI flux. Only the least massive HI object, which is among the
lowest mass HI sources previously found, does not have a clear optical
counterpart, but a nearby bright star may hide low surface brightness emission.
However the newly-detected systems do have unusual optical properties. Most of
the 40 galaxies that were not previously identified in magnitude-limited
catalogs appear to be gas-dominated systems, and several of these systems have
HI mass-to-light ratios among the largest values ever previously found. These
gas-dominated objects also tend to have very blue colors, low surface
brightnesses, and no central bulges, which correlate strongly with their
relative star-to-gas content.Comment: 48 pages, 10 figures, Figure 3 included as 3 separate JPG images. To
appear in Ap J Supplement