MILLIPEDS OF NORTH AMERICA 57 



Eviryurus australis Boliman 



Euryurus erythropygus australis Boliman, 1889, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 



11, p. 346. 

 Euryurus falcipes Loomis, 1943, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 92, No. 7, 



p. 403, fig. 15 (type locality: Torreya State Park, Liberty County, 



Florida; type: Mus. Comp. Zool.) . 

 Euryurus australis Hoffman, 1951, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 102, p. 238. 

 Type: U. S. Nat. Mus. 



Type Locality: Indian Springs, Bibb County, Georgia. 

 Range: Western Florida north to extreme western South Carolina and 

 central Kentucky. 



Euryurus erythropygus (Brandt) 



Polydesmus erythropygus Brandt, 1841, Recueil, p. 134. 



Euryurus maculatus Koch, 1847, m Krit. Rev. Insect. Deutchlands, vol. 3, 



p. 138 (type locality and present location of type both unknown) . 

 Polydesmus carolinensis Saussure, 1859, Linnaea Ent., vol. 13, p. 325 



(type locality: "Carolina"; type: Geneva Musevun). 

 Polydesmus (Euryurus) erythropygus Saussure and Humbert, 1872, 



Etudes sur les myriapodes, in Miss. Sci. Mexique, Zool., pt. 6, sect. 



2, p. 26. 

 Type: Formerly in the Berlin Museum; present location unknown. 

 Type Locality: Georgetown, Georgetown County, South Carolina. 

 Range: North and South Carolina, eastern Tennessee. Exact limits of 

 range not known. 



Euryurus leachii (Gray) 



Polydesmus leachii Gray, 1832, in Grifl&th, The animal kingdom, ... by 



the Baron Cuvier, vol. 15, plate 135, fig. 3. 

 Euryurus aculeatus Causey, 1952, Chicago Acad. Sci. Nat. Hist. Misc. 



No. 106, p. 9, fig. 8 (type locality: Giant City State Park, Madison 



County, Illinois; type: Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.) . 

 Type: British Mus. (Nat. Hist.). 

 Type Locality: Unknown. 



Range: Illinois and southern Wisconsin, east to Ohio, western Pennsyl- 

 vania, and northern Kentucky. 



Genus AUTURUS Chamberlin 



Auturus Chamberlin, 1942, BuU. Univ. Utah, biol. ser., vol. 6, No. 8, p. 7. 

 Generotype: Auturus phanus Chamberlin, by original designation. 

 Range: Mississippi Valley from Minnesota to Louisiana, east to Georgia. 

 Species: Ten. 



