BY FREDERICK A. A. SKUSE. 857 



black near the tip, preceded and followed (at the tip) by a narrow 

 ring of golden-yellow ; tibise infuscated at the base and tip (the 

 extreme base golden-yellow) ; tarsi brown or brownish, the meta- 

 tarsal joints more or less testaceous. Wings sub-hyaline, spotted 

 with brown, more completely so in 9 than ^ ; basal cells in ^ 

 almost entirely clouded; in ^ only at the ends and two roundish 

 spots, one at pmefurca, the other larger, beneath, in second 

 basal cell ; an oblong spot in anal cell filling space before the 

 middle ; similar clouds on margin in anal angle, and mid-way 

 between the tips of sixth and seventh longitudinal veins ; the 

 remaining clouds more or less round, situated close to the tips of 

 all the veins, and on the cross-veins, those on the latter confluent 

 (PI. XXII., fig. 28, 2 wing); veins brown; stigma not noticeable. 

 Auxiliary vein reaching costa some distance before inner end of 

 second sub-marginal cell ; sub-costal cross-vein a little before its 

 tip ; praefarca of moderate length, arcuated close to its base ; 

 petiole of first sub-marginal cell about (more or less) twice the 

 length of anterior branch of second longitudinal vein ; the latter 

 branch obliquely situated, very slightly sinuose, joining costa 

 a little beyond the tip of first longitudinal vein ; posterior branch 

 of second longitudinal vein slightly arcuated anteriorly, rather 

 longer than petiole of first sub-marginal cell ; marginal cross-vein 

 wanting ; inner end of second sub-marginal cell situated consider- 

 ably before that of first posterior cell ; small cross-vein short ; 

 third posterior cell considerably longer than the second posterior ; 

 discal cell elongate, the great cross-vein situated at its inner end ; 

 fifth, sixth and seventh veins arcuated at the tip, the seventh the 

 most noticeably. 



Eab. — Lawson, Blue Mountains, N.S.W. (Masters). Two 

 specimens in January. 



Obs. 1 . — A 9 specimen obtained by Mr. A. G. Hamilton at Mount 

 Kembla, Illawarra District, appears to belong to this species; it is 

 however considerably damaged. The anterior branch of second 

 longitudinal vein differs in being almost vertical, joining the costa 



