284 TERTIARY INSECTS OF NORTH AMERICA. 



Tegmina somewhat surpassing the abdomen, the longitudinal veins in 

 general much as in L. richardsoni. Abdomen much as there. 



Length of fragment, 11.5 mm ; probable length of body, 10 mm ; length of 

 tegmina, 10.25 mra ; breadth of abdomen, 5.25 mm . 



Named for Prof. Leslie A. Lee, of Bowdoin College, a diligent collector 

 of Green River fossil insects. 



Green River, Wyoming. One specimen, No. 119, Dr. A. S. Packard. 



FULGORA Linne". 



The species placed here are so referred only because, appearing to 

 belong to the subfamily of which this is a typical member, they can not be 

 more definitely placed. No other fossil insects have been referred to this 

 place. 



FULGOEA GRANULOSA. 



PI. G, Fig. 35. 

 Fulgora granulosa Scudd., Bull. U. S. Geol. Geogr. Surv. Terr., IV, 771-772 (1878). 



A single specimen and its reverse show only the thorax and abdomen 

 of an insect belonging to the subfamily of Fulgorida, but of which little 

 more can be said. The thorax is large, globose, and black ; the scutellum 

 is about half as large as the thorax, longer than broad, and rounded at the 

 apex ; the abdomen tapers gently, its apex about half as broad as its base, 

 and is provided with a pair of overlapping, black, roundish, oval plates, 

 giving the appearance of an additional segment. The surface of the thorax 

 and abdomen is thickly and uniformly granulate with circular, dark-edged 

 elevations, averaging 0.04 mm in diameter; the scutellum lacks this marking, 

 excepting at the edges, which are more minutely and profusely granulate. 



Length of body, 8.5 mm ; of thorax, 2.75" ; of scutellum, 1.4 mm ; of 

 appendages, I'" 1 " ; breadth of thorax, 2. 5 mm ; of scutellum, 1.25 mm ; of second 

 segment of abdomen, 2.2 mm . 



Green River, Wyoming. One specimen, Nos. 49 and 131 (F. C. A. 

 Richardson). 



FULGORA POPULATA. 



PL 7, Fig. 10. 



The dorsal view of a headless insect with overlapping wings but no 

 other appendages. The mesonotum is transverse, about three times as 

 broad as long, posteriorly truncate, anteriorly broadly rounded so as to be 



