262 II. S. GORHAM 



l). Coptolanguria dilatipes, n. sp. 



Viridiaenea j, cajnle^ corpore suhlus^ femoribusque indeterminate 

 rufo-piceiSj capile prothoracefjne parce punctatis, hoc siihquadrato, 

 vel (maris yj ìuodice elomjato, quam elytra lai ion , elijlris apicem 

 veì'sus calde allenualis, fortiter jnmclalo-slrialis; apicihìni excisis, 

 angulo externo mucronato. Pedibus y radi ih as , jhnoribus leuiter 

 incrassatis, tarsis (feminae?) dilataiis. Long IG-ID millim. 



ìlah. Burma, Garin Gheba. 



Head very shining-, brassy, witli a sliallow rather large de- 

 pression between the eyes, very finely and rather sparingly 

 punctured, the cheeks widened in front of the eyes, which thus 

 appear superior and not lateral , the eyes are finely facetted ; 

 the antennae have all tlie joints to the sixth elongate and fii- 

 sifonn , the seventh is triangular, not so wide however as the 

 eigtli , but the inner angle much developed , and distinctly 

 forming the base of a five-jointed club. The head is pitchy 

 beneath, at the sides and base. The thorax in the larg(T example, 

 which, has the dilated tarsi, is as wide or wider than long; 

 the base and sides evenly margined, the base depressed in the 

 middle , the sides slightly rounded ; in the other two examples 

 it is longer than wide, the sides are more contracted at the 

 front and ])eliind, the disc in more convex. There are two im- 

 pressions , one on each side of the disk , in front , and one or 

 two vague lateral ones behind, on the Imse are two short strigae. 

 The elytra are evenly and strongly narrowed from the base to 

 the apex. The punctures in the series are very deep, and though 

 so close as sometimes to be coniiuent , are for the most part 

 distinct, they terminate a little before the apex which is itself 

 smooth. The edge of the excision is ciliate. The body beneath 

 is for the most part very smooth, a few large punctures appear 

 on the front of the refiexed side of the thorax ; the wide tra- 

 pezoidal prosternai process is vaguely and obsoletely punct^ite . 

 as is the mesosternum, and sides of the ventral segments. There 

 are three specimens before me, of whicli two have the more 

 elongate thorax and less dilated tarsi , described above , and in 

 these the anterior femora have on their inner side a double row 



