HENRY SKINNER 209 



Fulton County, Georgia, VII, 14; Omaha, Nebraska, V and VII, (Leussler) ; 

 Chimney Gulch, Colorado, VI, 20, (Oslar) ; Clear Creek Canyon, Colorado, 

 VI, 11, (Oslar); Mount Graham, Arizona. 

 Thanaos ausonius Lintner, Twenty-third Report New York State Cab. 



Nat. Hist., 166, 1872, figs. 11. 12, pi. 7. 



Cook (Journ. New York Ent. Soc, xv, 125, 1906), puts ausonius 

 as an aberration of martialis. There is no doubt but that Mr. Cook 

 is correct in this. Ausonius has never been found since it was orig- 

 inally described. 



Thanaos juvenalis Fabricius, Ent. Syst., iii, 339, no. 291, 1793. 



Butler, Catl. of Diurnal Lep. described by Fabricius, in the collection of 



the British Museum, p. 287, 1869. ("Georgia. From Mr. Milnes' collec- 

 tion." British Museum.) > 

 Smith and Abbot, Ins. Georgia, pi. 21, 1797. (A male Thanaos is figured and 



is like brizo and has no vitreous spots. The female figured may be hora- 



this, juvenalis, etc. The larvae is figured.) 

 Boisduval and Leconte, Lep. Amer. Sept., t. 65, f. 1, male, f. 2 (underside), 



fig. 3, female, f. 4, larva, f. 5, chrysalis. This represents juvenalis as 



treated in the present paper. 

 Scudder and Burgess, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., xiii, 279, 1870 (genitalia). 

 Scudder, Butterflies East. U. S. and Can., ii, 1476, pi. 9, f. 13, 14, 1889. 

 Holland, Butterfly Book, pi. 48, fig. 11, female. 

 Wright, Butterflies West Coast, pi. 32, f . 462 (probably the female of proper- 



tius). 

 ennius Scudder and Burgess, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., 13, 296, 1870 



{genitalia) . 



The original description ofyure/mZis is as follows . . . "Alisecaudatis 

 fuscis: anticis atro maculatis alboque punctatis. Habitat in America. 

 Dom. Jones. Statura omino H. Flefi. Alae omnes supra fuscae. 



Anticae maculis atris pvmctisque albis, sparsis, posticae striga submar- 

 ginali e maculis cinereis, puncto atro notatis, subtus concolores. 



Papilio juvenalis. Jon. fig. pict. 6. tab. 78, fig. 1." 



Wings dark brown without tails. Anteriors with black spots and white 

 points. Size of H. flefi. All wings fuscous above. Anteriors with black 

 spots and a few white points. Posteriors with submarginal streaks and 

 cinereous spots, marked with a black dot, below concolorous. (Transla- 

 tion.) 



Distribution. — Vancouver; Ontario; Quebec; Maine to Florida; 

 Mississippi Valley. 



Records. — Framingham, Mass., VI, 4; Cumberland Mills, Rhode Island, 

 V, 11; Johnston, Rhode Island, V, 21 to 25, VI, 179 Philadelphia, Penna.; 

 Pittsburgh, Penna.; IV, 23; South Amboy, N. J., V, 5 to 15; Riverton, N. J., 

 V, 9; Camden, N. J.; Westville, N. J., IV, 3; Clementon, N. J., V, 5 to 18; 

 Zona, N. J., IV, 30; Manumuskin, N. J., V, 8; North Carolina; Thomasville, 



TRANS. AM. ENT. St)C., XL. 



