238 JOURNAL, BOMB A Y NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. XV III. 



5. Anamallay Hills. — Thurston. In Madras Museum. (In epistola.) 



Beddome. In British Museum Collection. 



6. Ceylon. — Haly, Ferguson, Willey. British Museum Collection. 



7. Calcutta. — Sclater. In Indian Museum, Calcutta. 



8. Barisal. — Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. Collection. 



9. Garo Hills. — Sclater. Indian Museum, Calcutta. 



10. Khasya Hills. — Sclater. Indian Museum, Calcutta. 



11. North Cachar. — Annandale. Indian Museum, Calcutta. 



12. Naga Hills. — Sclater. Samaguting, 2,000 feet. Indian 



Museum, Calcutta. 



13. Nazira. — Sclater. Indian Museum, Calcutta. 



14. The Dooars. — Millar. (In epistola.) Specimens in St. Joseph's 



College Museum, Darjeeling. 



15. Darjeeling. — Stoliczka. (Jourl., As. Soc, Bengal, Vol. XL, 



p. 422.) 

 Description, — Rostral. Touches 6 shields ; the sutures formed with 

 the anterior nasals are twice or nearly twice those formed with the 

 internasals. Tnternasals. — A pair ; the suture between them about 

 two-thirds the suture between the prefrontal fellows ; subequal to 

 or rather less than the internaso-prgefrontal suture. Prefrontals. — A 

 pair ; the suture between them subequal to, or rather greater than 

 the prsefronto-frontal suture ; in contact with internasal, postnasal, 

 loreal, prseocular, supraocular (usually) and frontal. Frontal. — Touches 

 6 shields ; the supraocular sutures about three times the fronto- 

 parietals, and about twice the fronto-prsefrontals. Supraoculars. — 

 Length equal to, or nearly equal to frontal ; breadth one-third or 

 more greater than the frontal, at a point opposite middle of eyes. 

 Nasals. — Divided ; in contact with the 1st and 2nd supralabials. 

 Loreal. — One ; longer than broad. Prceoculars. — One ; sometimes 

 touching the frontal. Postoculars — Two. Temporals. — Two small 

 anteriorly ; the lower in contact with the 7th and 8th supralabials 

 (sometimes Gth also). Supralabials. — 9 or 10 ; the 5th and 6th 

 touching the eye usually (in Burmese specimens), sometimes the 

 4th also. Sublinguals. — Two pairs ; the posterior rather larger, and 

 in contact with the 5th and 6th infralabials usually. Infrala- 

 bials. — The first meet to form a suture, half or less than half 

 that between the anterior sublinguals ; the 6th largest usually 

 (rarely 5th or 7th) broader than the posterior sublinguals and 



