NEUUOL'TEKA. 



583 



is next related to the Ephemerina. The parts of the mouth 

 have nothing of the Hemiptera about them and they are even 

 more related to 

 the Diptera." 

 While we would 

 el e f e r to the 

 j u d g in e 11 1 of 

 these d i s t i n - 

 guished ento- 

 mologists who 

 have actually 

 studied the fos- 

 sil itself, yet 

 judging from 

 Dohrn's draw- 

 ing we would 

 refer the insect 

 to the Neurop- i. 

 tera, and would 

 suggest that in 

 certain charac- 

 ters we are strongly reminded of certain more abnormal genera 

 of Hemerobidce and the Panorpidw. The wings while 

 closely resembling the Ephemerids, as Dr. Hagen has sug- 

 gested to us, also, in our opinion, recall those of an African 

 species of Palpares, and of 'the fore wings of Nemoptera, and 

 the antenme and beak-like mouth-parts seem analogous to 

 those of Pauorpa and Boreus.* 



Fi<;. 572. Eugereon Bockingi Dohrn, enlarged three diameters; A, a, lab- 

 rimi; />, first pair of jaws (mandibles); c, second pair (maxilla?) ; e, labial palpi: 

 /, 1'ragments of antenna; ; m, portion of legs; , middle tibiae. C, , b, antennae; D, 

 n, bead; b, fore femora; c, prothorax ; d, prosternum( ?); E, tarsus and end of tbe 

 tibia of tbe left fore leg. After Dohrn. 



*Erichsou and Siebold have grouped the Termitidce, Psocidce, Embidce, 

 Ephemeridre and Libellulidceunder the name of "false" Xeuroptera, and con- 

 sidered them as Orthoptera, restricting the Neuroptera to the Sialidre, Hemero- 

 bid(B, Pano r pi dee and Phryganeida>.,an(\ this classification has been adopted 

 by most continental entomologists. Now while believing in the unity of the Xeu- 

 ropterous type, and that the so called " false " Neuroptera (especially the May-flies 

 and the dragon-flies) are really the most typical of the suborder, being the most 

 unlike other insects, do not we have many characters in these palaeozoic net- 

 veined insects, which unite more intimately the so called false and true Neurop- 

 ters ? We would not forget the analogies shown in these fossil net-veined insect* 



