46 e. J. GAHAN 



Garin Mts. (district of Gheba). One example. The British Mu- 

 seum collection contains examples from Sylhet in Assam, from 

 Siam, Gambodia, and Burma. 



111. Pharsalia antennata, sp. n. Fusca, prothorace supra lineis 

 quatuor fulva; elylris maculis paucis atro-velutinis et maculis mi- 

 nutis fulvis sub-confluenlibus et irregulariter dispersis; capite tu- 

 berculis antenniferis contiguis; elytris valde punctatis obtuse can- 

 natisi uf risque ad basin tuberculo magno munitis; apicibus rotun- 

 datis; antennis quam corpore multo longioribus, rufo-ferrugineis, 

 articulorum apicibus fuscis: articulis 3^ et 4" ( </") apice incrassatis 

 articulis 3° e^ 4° ( 9 ) apice nodosis. Long. 20-25 mm. 



Upper Burma (Catcin Gauri) one /' example , and Garin 

 (district of Gheba) one 9 example. 



Dark brown, prothorax with four fulvous lines above; elytra 

 with some velvety black spots and with numerous minute ful- 

 vous and grey spots which here and there run together. Head 

 with the inner horns of the strong and vertical antennal tuber- 

 cles meeting in the middle line, and leaving a slight depression 

 between them only on the anterior face. Prothorax slightly 

 rugose above , and with a sharp conical tubercle on each side. 

 Elytra rather coarsely punctured, especially towards the base, 

 strongly nitid where not covered with pubescence , each with 

 two or three obtuse carinae, and furnished with a strong tu- 

 bercle, whose anterior face rises sub- vertically from the basal 

 margin ; apices of the elytra rounded. Body underneath with 

 minute scattered fulvous spots. Legs reddish brown with faint 

 grey pubescence. Antennae in the female more than half as 

 long again as the body (the antennae in the single male 

 example are broken otf from the seventh joint), with the third 

 and fourth joints in the female nodose at the apex , wnth the 

 same joints in the male thickened, but not nearly so strongly 

 as in the female ; the scape is ferruginous brown, the remaining 

 joints reddish brown with their apices fuscous. 



The exceptional characters of this species will enable it to be 

 readily recognized. Notwithstanding the close contact of its an- 

 tennal tubercles, and the decided thickening of the apices of 



