THE PSEUDOSCORPION-FAUNA OF THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 133 



Records " Chihonius tetradactylus " found inside a flower in 

 the rockery. = Chihonius tetrachelatus (Preys.) ? 



A big work by C. J. With : " The Danish Expedition to Siam, 

 1899-1900. Chelonethi : An Account of the Indian False- 

 Scorpions together with studies on the Anatomy and Classifica- 

 tion of the Order " (Kjobenhavn, Vid. Selsk. Skr. 7, iii. pp. 1-214) 

 was published in 1906 ; and about this time also several other 

 works by the same avithor appeared either in Copenhagen or 

 London : all of the first order of importance. With's grasp of 

 the subject is remarkable ; and, among all his brilUant work, the 

 studies in Chelifer s. 1. are particularly valuable. He availed 

 himself fully of the good diagnostic characters already used by 

 H. J. Hansen (whose pupil he was), and discovered many new 

 characters of wide practical importance. Hansen and With are 

 the institutors of the modern study of Pseudoscorpiones, and a 

 knowledge of their work is essential to the equipment of those 

 who attempt to deal with these animals, 



34. Cambridge, 0. P. — On New and Rare Britisli Arachnida. 

 Proc. Dorset Natural History etc. Field Club, xxviii. pp. 121- 

 48. Dorchester, 1907. 



Records Chernes minutus Ell. from Elmer's End, Beckenliam. 

 = Chelifer {Chernes) scorfioides Herm. 



35. EUingsen, E. — Notes on Pseudoscorpions, British and 

 Foreign. Journ. Quekett Microscopical Club (2), x. pp. 155-72. 

 London, 1907. 



An elaborate report on a collection received from me in 

 1906. Records (1) Chelifer Chyzeri (Tom.), from Burnham 

 Beeches (Buckinghamshire), two specimens found under the bark 

 of a beech-stump, in 1905, = Chelifer (Chernes) Chyzeri (Tom.); 

 and (2) Chelifer Wideri C. L. Koch, found at West Wickham 

 (Kent), and in Sherwood Forest, under the bark of old oaks, 

 in 1905 and 1906. = Chehfer (Chernes) Wideri C. L. Koch. 



36. Godfrey, R. — The False-Scorpions of Scotland. Annals 

 of Scottish Natural History, xvii. pp. 90-100, 155-61 ; xviii. 

 pp. 22-26, 153-63 ; xix. pp. 23-33. Edinburgh, 1908-10. 



The Rev. R. Godfrey, who had already contributed several 

 smaller papers to the " Annals of Scottish Natural History," 

 gives here the final account of his Scottish field-work.* No 



* Godfrey left Scotland for South Africa during the printing of 

 these papers, and continued there his work on this Order ; cf. EUing- 

 seji's " Pseudoscorpions of South Africa based on the Collections of the 



