12 FOSSIL BUTTERFLIES. 



way toward the basal angle of the costal margin, curves slightly outward and 

 fades away; the costal nervure, on approaching the border, curves outward and 

 meets the- border near the middle of its outer two-thirds; the subcostal breaks 

 into three branches, exactly as in Zophoessa. The median nervure and its middle 

 branch form a continuous, almost exactly straight line, from which the lowermost 

 branch parts opposite the union of the vein closing the cell with the lowest 

 subcostal nervule; and the uppermost at exactly the tip of the cell, or as far 

 beyond the origin of the lowest nervule as the upper limit of the vein closing 

 the cell is from the base of the upper subcostal nervule; the vein closing the 

 cell is a very weak one and originates on the lowest subcostal nervule, as far 

 from the second divarication of the subcostal nervure as that is from the first, 

 and passes in a gentle curve, opening outward, to the second divarication of the 

 median nervure. The submedian and internal nervures are united for a short 

 distance beyond the base of the cell ; the submedian passes with a gentle regular 

 curve to the outer border, at the lower outer angle; the internal parts from this 

 with an opposing curve and terminates somewhere below the middle of the inner 

 flap of the wing, probably approaching again the submedian nervure near its 

 extremity. JSTone of the veins are swollen at the base: The cell is two and 

 three-quarters times longer than broad. 



In the disposition of its markings (PI. I, fig. 8) this genus does not seem to 

 show any strong affinity with any living butterflies, although it has some features 

 in common with the genera already referred to (PI. IF, iigs. 3, !', 11, 13, 14). 

 The base of the wing is dark, followed by paler spots and bands, differing greatly 

 iu the front and hind Avings, followed again by a belt of dusky scales, which 

 separates from the rest of the wing a paler submarginal band, enclosing roundish, 

 interspaceal, often pupillated spots of varying size, and whose outer limits are at 

 least an interspace's distance from the outer border; the latter is margined, on 

 the hind wings, with alternating darker and lighter hues. The middle portions 

 of the two wings differ; the hind wings have simply a broad pale field, gradually 

 merging on either side into the darker parts and varied by a cloudy, wavy, 

 narrow, transverse belt near the middle; (In- lure wing, on the other hand, is 



