160 E. ELLINGSEN ON 



above nearly straight, in the middle, however, curving slightly 

 forwards ; the posterior groove considerably nearer to the hinder 

 margin than to the first groove, and nearly straight. The 

 surface a little glossy or nearly dull, distinctly and evenly 

 granulated, with short, clavate hairs. 



Abdomen. Tergites slightly glossy, distinctly granulated, all 

 divided longitudinally, except the last one, and having along the 

 margin of each tergite a dense row of moderately long, decidedly 

 clavate hairs inclining backwards ; on the last somite two pairs 

 of " tactile hairs." Sternites somewhat glossy, granulated, dis- 

 tinctly divided longitudinally except the last one ; the hinder 

 margins with pointed hairs. 



Palps about as long as the body, partly without gloss. Coxa 

 smooth and glossy, with pointed hairs. The other joints (except 

 the fingers) are finely granulated, the granulation, especially on 

 the tibia and hand, being much obscured and rather roughened. 

 The hairs are more or less distinctly clavate, more especially so on 

 the inner side of the proximal joints, less distinctly on the outer 

 surface and on the hand ; the fingers have pointed hairs. 

 Trochanter with a rather long stalk ; apart from this little longer 

 than wide, the inner side strongly convex, behind with a rounded 

 prominence near the base, above with a similar one nearer to the 

 extremity. Femur with a distinct stalk ; apart from this about 

 twice as long as broad ; seen from above it is, in front, in the 

 proximal part slightly convex, distally slightly concave, behind 

 a little widened from the stalk, the outer margin very little 

 convex, the whole narrowing but little towards the extremity; 

 laterally seen, it rises almost perpendicularly and very strongly 

 from the stalk, the upper surface being very convex, the lower 

 side flattened. Tibia with moderately long and robust stalk, 

 the outer side evenly and rather strongly convex, in front rather 

 abruptly widened from the stalk, in the proximal half somewhat 

 swollen, distally slightly concave. Hand with a short stalk, the 

 base, seen from above, somewhat obliquely rounded, the outer 

 side moderately convex, the inner side more strongly so, gradually 

 passing into the fingers ; laterally seen, though somewhat 

 obliquely, the base makes almost a right angle with the stalk, 

 the hand being higher than broad ; the hand is not quite twice as 

 broad as tibia, as E. Simon states it to be for his C. rufeolus, 

 only a little more than one-and-a-half times as broad, if the 



