HEMIPTERA—nOMOPTERA— APHIDES. 269 



vein arises tolerably early, and is considerably arcuate at base, afterwards 

 longitudinal, the stigmatic cell being nearh or (juite a third the length of 

 the wing. 



Length of body, 2..'')"""; fore wing, 2.7.')""". 



Florissant. One specimen. No. .''•I 4. 



Stibfaraily SCHIZONEURIN^E Passerini. 

 12. SCHIZONEUHOIDES Huckton. 



Schicoiieiiroides Buckt., Jlouogr. Brit. ApUiJes, I\', 178 (1883.) 



Fore wings with the postcostal vein distant from the margin and curved 

 in an opposite sense. Stigmatic vein arising very early, near the proximal 

 end of the long stigma, so that the stigmatic cell is fully two-fifths the 

 length of the wing. Cubital vein once forked far beyond the base of the 

 stigmatic vein, and at a long distance from its own origin, which is near the 

 middle of the outer half of the space between the first oblique and stigmatic 

 veins, the second oblique vein arising twice as near the first as the cubital 

 vein, but not very near the former, though somewhat nearer than repre- 

 sented on the plate, diverging from it at a slight angle, so that the first dis- 

 coidal cell between them is nearly or quite four times as broad on the hind 

 margin as at the base. Abdomen long oval, no broader than the thorax, 

 about twice as long as broad, and a little pointed apically. 



A single species is known. 



SCHIZONEUROIDES SCUUDERI. 

 PI. 18, Fig. 2. 



Schizoneuroidea scudderi Buckt., Monogr. Brit. Aphides, IV, 178, PI. 133, Fig. 5 (1883) ; Scudd., Zittel, 

 H.indl). d. Pala-ont., I, ii, 780, Fig. 988 (1885). 



The greater portion of a liody with the wings of one side represents 

 this small species. The body is mottled and barred with dark brown. The 

 wing is represented on the plate with altogether too full a hind margin, for 

 the wing is really more than three times as long as broad. The middle of 

 the base of the first discoidal cell is midway between the ])ase of the wing 

 and the stigmatic vein. The first oblique vein is straight, and parts from 

 the postcostal at an angle of fifty degrees ; the second gently sinuate, at au 



