168 



Annals of the South African Museum. 



unguis four stout teeth. The figures which Bonnier gives of these 

 teeth under the two names are not precisely alike, but in his text he 

 makes no allusion to the difference. The species now added to the 

 genus has, however, only three teeth to this joint instead of four, 

 and to that mark of distinction the specific name calls attention. 

 The integument is conspicuously squamose. The pseudorostral 



A. Proc<i>iipi/l<i*]>ix tri- 

 (Jcnt/itux in dorsal aspect. 



B. Carapace and parts 

 of pedigerous segments in 

 lateral aspect. 



n.s. Line indicating 

 natural size of specimen 

 figured. 



lobes a little upturned meet for a short space in front of the 

 narrow 7 bidenticulate eyelobe ; their margins in dorsal aspect are 

 obliquely truncate and finely denticulate ; they form a sinus, and 

 after a bulge descend to a small antero-lateral tooth, which is fol- 

 lowed at some distance by a similar tooth on the lower margin. 

 The carapace is longitudinally well arched, not actually carinate, with 

 scattered hairs and a little denticle behind the centre of the median 



