COLEOPTERA— SCARAB^ID^. 489 



a groove very similar to the striae and bearing similar punctures ; there is 

 also a short and exceedingly slight and faint scutellar stria crowded against 

 the scutellum. 



Length of elytron, 3"°" ; breadth, 1.3°"°. 



Not improbably these should be looked upon as belonging to Carabidae 



Bone caves of Port Kennedy, Pennsylvania. 



^GIALIA Latreille. 



^GIALIA KUPTA. 

 PI. 8, Fig. 19. 



A single specimen and its reverse are preserved with partially expanded 

 strongly arched elytra.- Body elongated obovate, two and a half times 

 longer than broad. Head small, broadly rounded in front, the eyes (not 

 shown in the plate) moderately L^rge, Oval, less than half as large as one of 

 the pair of oval distinct marks in the middle of the head posteriorly, which 

 are either some parts beneath showing through, or ridges or the bases of 

 horns on the upper surface. Prothorax about twice as broad as long, taper- 

 ing anteriorly from the posterior edge and with rounded sides, the whole 

 front border broadly emarginate, the hind margin scarcely convex, the sur- 

 face indistinctly granulate. Elytra rather heavily striate, the striae rather 

 distantly punctate. 



Length of body, 3.4°"°; of middle of prothorax, O.S""; of elytra, 2""; 

 breadth of prothorax in front, O.T"""; the same behind, LI"""; of middle of 

 body, 1.35"°'. 



Green River, Wyoming. One specimen, Nos. 80 and 81 (Dr. A. S. 

 Packard j. 



PHAN^US MacLeay. 



Phan^us antiquus. 

 PI. 1, Figs. 12-14. 



Phanceas antiquus Horn, Trans. Aiuer. Ent. Soc, V, 245 (1876). 



" Elytra with feeble striaj, intervals moderately convex, surface slightly 

 rugulose. Abdomen smooth. Length, .40 inch ; 10'""'. 



, " A species is indicated somewliat larger than carnifex ; the elytral 

 sculpture is, however, more nearly that of pluto, inasmuch as the intervals 



