772 ZOOLOGY INSECTS. 



enlarge, each with blue scales and a well-defined yellow iris ; the cellular 

 spots as on upper side, the intervening space being clear white. 



Secondaries pearl-gray, tinted with blue near hind margin ; the gray 

 shade least dense on the disk next before the ocelli, allowing a brown sub- 

 color to appear ; the submarginal lines repeated ; the inner margin also 

 bordered by a brown line ; the white discal patch and spots repeated, and 

 the line of spots extended across the wing to inner margin, following the 

 course of a dark, wavy line ; the spots in the cell distinct, being transverse 

 bars ; the interior one prolonged into the next upper interspace ; the ocelli 

 repeated, and each containing a large, blue patch, and edged by a narrow, 

 yellow ring, which itself is edged indistinctly by fuscous ; an additional 

 ocellus on the inner margin, small, oval, also marked with blue. 



Body above reddish-brown, beneath gray on thorax, yellowish on 

 abdomen ; legs ochraceous, the tibias gray ; palpi clear white, fulvous above 

 and at tip ; antenna? yellow-fulvous, partly annulated with white ; club fus- 

 cous at base, yellow at tip. 



From two <?, taken by H. W. Heushaw, August, 1874, at Camp Lowell 

 and in Sonoita Valley, Arizona. Edtvards, 1. c. 



LIBYTHEA, Fabr. 

 t LIBYTHEA CARINENTA, Cramer. 

 Libythea Carinenta, CRAMER, ii, pi. 108. 



This rare species was brought in by the expedition of 1871, probably 

 from near the borders of Mexico ; it occurs also in Texas, and ranges south- 

 ward to Brazil. 



CCENONYMPHA, Hiibner. 



COSNONYMPHA OCHRACEA, Edw. 

 Coanonympha Ochracea, EDW., Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci Phila., 1861. 



This species was brought by the expedition from the South Park. It 

 abounds throughout all the mountainous region of Colorado during June 

 and July ; but none wore seen later than August. Seventy-five specimens 

 were taken by me ; they show no very great variations. 



