AMERICAN LEPIDOPTERA. 205 



Secondaries deep ferruginous from base to the outer side of second 

 row of spots, showing a clear fulvous space on the upper side of the 

 cell ; the belt between the outer rows reddish buff, immaculate and 

 not encroached on by the basal color ; the submarginal spots large, 

 triangular, edged on all sides by a fine line of black scales, and on 

 the upper side narrowly also by ferruginous ; the spots of the second 

 row of rather small size, the first and sixth equal, rounded, the fifth 

 larger, rounded, the second long oval, the third similar but smaller, 

 the fourth minute, the seventh rounded, deeply cleft on the outer side ; 

 all these lightly edged above with black, and each projecting a fer- 

 ruginous shadow on the belt; the third row of four spots, the first on 

 costal margin semi-lunate, the second in cell large, sub-pjriform, cut 

 by a brown stripe, the base circular, the third, in submediaa interspace, 

 small, lunate ; all these heavily edged with black above ; the fourth 

 spot is minute, on inner margin ; in the cell a round spot, and at ori- 

 gin of submedian an oval, both in black rings ; a small patch at base 

 above cell ; shoulder and inner margin lightly silvered. 



Body above fulvous, below reddish buff; legs reddish buff; palpi 

 buff, reddish in front and at tip; antennse fuscous above, fulvous 

 below ; club black, fulvous at tip. 



Female. — Expands 2.7 inch. Upper side more yellow, the basal 

 portions nearly black, concealing all markings ; the marginal lines on 

 primaries confluent and dilated, forming a very broad black border, 

 with which the heavy luuules are also confluent; the spots inclosed by 

 the lunules small, rounded, yellowish next apex, fulvous elsewhere. 

 Secondaries have also a broad black margin, but disclosing fulvous 

 next both angles, the lunules slender. Under side nearly as in the 

 male, the basal area of primaries more red, while that of secondaries 

 is of a darker ferruginous. 



From 2 S 1 9 , taken in New Mexico, above the timber line, by 

 Lieut. W. C. Carpenter, of the Wheeler expedition of 1875. 

 This species is of the size of Atlantis, and is near Cyhele. 



Enptychia Henshawi, n. sp. 



Mak. — Expands 1.5 inch. Upper side light fuscous, immaculate. 

 Under side of primaries russet, deepest along inner margin, brownish 

 towards costa ; crossed by four wavy ferruginous lines, one of which 

 is parallel to the hind margin, midway between cell and margin, one 

 just beyond the cell, and curving around it to costa, the third crosses 

 middle of cell, and the fourth is a demi-line, ending at median nervure ; 

 there are also four transverse streaks near base of wing. Secondaries 

 gray-brown, slightly russet-tinted; crossed by two ferruginous lines, 



