Tertiary Spiders and Opilionids. 



245 



the legs on the right side are completely preserved we can state 

 positively that there is no scopula either on the tarsi or metatarsi. 

 The claws are not well discernil)le. but it seems that there are onlv 



Figure 15. — Parattus rrsiirrcctus Scudder. Specimen No. 8282 (65). Legs: 

 a, first left; b, second right; c, third right; d, fourth right. 



X20. 



two claws and that lioth are smooth. It would be impossible to 

 decide whether the two specimens represent the male and the 

 female of the same species. Legs in order 1243. 



Parattus evocatiis Scudder {Text figure 16). 

 Scudder, Tertiary Insects, 1890, p. 54. 



• One female. No. 12005 (now Xo. 66) from Florissant in the 

 Scudder Collection of the Museum of Comparative Zoology of 

 Harvard University. 



It is difficult to ascertain whether Scudder's description of the 

 species is correct or erroneous. At one time I thought to see two 

 rows of eyes, more or less equidistant and equal in size, one pro- 



