. 87 



consists of two portions; the first of a single (the seventh) joint which is 

 sulicircular and sharply separated from the remainder (though not appear- 

 ing so in the published figure), which are closely united and equal, excepting 

 that the last is minute. 



A single species is known, and comes from Florissant. 



EPANUR^EA INGENITA. 



'i ingenita Scudd., Tert. rhyiirh. C<>1. I'. S.. pi. 1. tig. 2 (1892). 



Head large, fully two-thirds as wide as the prothorax, and two-thirds us 

 as limad, the front well rounded, the surface feebly punctate; eyes 

 large, lateral. Prothorax more than half as broad again as long, tapering 

 slightly, with rounded sides, the front feebly and broadly emargiiiate, the 

 surface more distinctly punctate than the head. Elytra a little broader at 

 base than the thorax, with strongly pronounced impunctured strije. Legs 

 moderately short and not very slender, the tibiae with long and delicate 

 spurs. 



Length, 4.6 mm.; breadth, 1.9 mm. 



Florissant, Colorado; three specimens, Nos. 3517, 10267, 11661. 



NITIDULA Fabricius. 



A cosmopolitan genus with not a great many species, three only of 

 which occur in the United States. Eight species of the genus have been 

 found in the early Tertiaries of Oeuingen and Radoboj; it has also been 

 recognized in amber, and one species occurs in Colorado. 



NITIDULA PRIOR sp. nov. 

 PI. IX. fig. 11. 



Body oblong ovate, broadest at the elytra. Head large, transverse, 

 well rounded, broadest posteriorly, half as broad again as long, with no 

 siirn of emargination in front of the eyes, which do not disturb the even 

 contour of the sides. Prothorax rather short, at its broadest twice as broad 

 as louo-, broadest at base, with pretty regularly rounded sides, but tapering, 

 especially in front, where it is only a little wider than the head, the sides 

 scarcely if at all marginate: bast- apparently regularly truncate, the front 

 rather deeply emargiuate; surface both of head and thorax uncertain, but 

 showing in certain places as delicately rugulose in a transverse sense. 



