104 TERTIARY COLEOPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. 



( 'H(KKIDH"M ? EBENINUM. 



." ebeninum Horn. Trans. Am. Ent. Sot-.. V, 24-4-245 (1876); Scudd.. 

 Tert. Ins. N. A.. 4'.tO-4!U. pi. 1. tio-s. 18, 1 (1890). 



Bone caves of Pennsylvania. 



PHAN^US MacLeay. 



An American genus tolerably rich in species, of which only about half 

 a dozen occur in the United States. A single fossil has been found in the 

 Pennsylvania Pleistocene. 



PHAN^EUS ANTIQUUS. 



Horn, Trims. Am. Ent. Soc., V, 24-5 (1876); Scudd., Tert. Ins. 

 N. A., 489-4-90, i>l. 1, fijys. 12-14- (1890). 



Bone caves of Pennsylvania. 



^EGIALIA Latreille. 



A north temperate genus with rather few species, most of them found 

 in North America. A single fossil species occurs in Wyoming. 



RUPTA. 



j<j!<ti;,i nijifii Scudd.. Tert. Ins. N. A.. 4*9, pi. S, nV. lit (IS'.H)). 

 Green River, Wyoming. 



AT.ENIUS Harold. 



An American genus with numerous species, of \\ hicli a 1 tout a dox.cn 

 and a half are found in the United States. A single fossil occurs in ( 'olorado. 



AT.V.MfS PATESCKNS. 



PI. XI. liys. 5, 8, in. 

 , \titniiix ji<//,x<; //A Scudd.. Tert. rhynch. Col. T. S.. pi. 1. liu-. 14(ls;2). 



l!ody slender, e(|iial, slightly more than twice as long as broad. Head 

 finely punctate and slightly plicate, slighlly longer than in A.(ili<IUns llald. 

 Thorax of the same shape as in that species, distinctly and rather closelx 

 punctate-, showing on the sides some tendencx to a transverse arrangement. 



