﻿"Smaller, 
  dai'ker, 
  dark 
  bands 
  on 
  forewings 
  broader 
  and 
  confluent. 
  

   From 
  the 
  high 
  North." 
  

  

  Staudiager. 
  " 
  Cat.," 
  Ed. 
  ii., 
  Pt. 
  i., 
  p. 
  171. 
  1871. 
  

  

  Ab. 
  cT 
  nnicoloraria. 
  

  

  " 
  Al. 
  totis 
  fuscis, 
  ciliis 
  flavido 
  interruptis." 
  

  

  Unicolorous 
  black- 
  brown, 
  only 
  the 
  fringes 
  chequered 
  light 
  and 
  

   dark. 
  The 
  ground, 
  where 
  it 
  is 
  indicated, 
  is 
  yellowish. 
  

  

  The 
  British 
  Museum 
  specimens 
  of 
  this 
  form 
  are 
  almost 
  uniformly 
  

   brown, 
  and 
  the 
  fringes 
  are 
  chequered. 
  

  

  Haworth. 
  " 
  Lep. 
  Brit.," 
  Pt. 
  2, 
  p. 
  281. 
  1810. 
  

  

  CaiJxynaria. 
  

  

  "The 
  Black 
  Heath) 
  G. 
  alis 
  omnibus 
  saturate 
  piceo-fuscis, 
  punctis 
  

   vel 
  maculis 
  paucis 
  albidis, 
  ciliis 
  albis 
  fuscisque. 
  

  

  Ph. 
  G. 
  carbonaria. 
  L. 
  " 
  Fn. 
  S.," 
  1246 
  ? 
  

  

  " 
  Habitat 
  apud 
  nos 
  rarissime. 
  Exemplarium 
  unicum 
  fteminse 
  

   solum 
  vidi. 
  Imago 
  m. 
  Jun. 
  Ericetis. 
  

  

  " 
  Expansis 
  alarum 
  11 
  lin. 
  

  

  "Descriptio. 
  Prsecedenti, 
  nimis 
  afifinis, 
  at 
  longe 
  minor. 
  Antennae 
  

   nigrfe 
  albo 
  irregulariter 
  annulatte. 
  Vix 
  Ph. 
  G. 
  carbonaria, 
  Linn." 
  

  

  Stephens, 
  " 
  Illus.," 
  Vol. 
  iii., 
  p. 
  149. 
  1831. 
  

  

  Fidonia 
  ca 
  rhona 
  ria 
  . 
  

  

  " 
  Alis 
  omnibus 
  saturate 
  piceo-fuscis, 
  punctis 
  parvis 
  albidis, 
  ciliis 
  

   albis 
  fuscisque." 
  

  

  " 
  Dull-brown, 
  with 
  minute 
  paler 
  irrorations 
  : 
  wings 
  deep 
  pitchy- 
  

   black, 
  with 
  a 
  few 
  whitish 
  spots 
  or 
  blotches 
  : 
  cilia, 
  whitish 
  and 
  

   fuscous 
  : 
  antennae 
  black, 
  irregularly 
  annulated 
  with 
  white. 
  

  

  " 
  Probably 
  a 
  mere 
  suffused 
  variety 
  of 
  the 
  preceding 
  [atutnaria.) 
  

  

  " 
  Taken 
  on 
  heaths 
  near 
  London, 
  in 
  the 
  middle 
  of 
  June." 
  

  

  Wood. 
  " 
  Index," 
  p. 
  78, 
  pi. 
  18, 
  fig. 
  455. 
  1839. 
  

   Fidunia 
  carbonaria. 
  (Black 
  Heath.) 
  

  

  This 
  figure 
  does 
  not 
  agree 
  with 
  either 
  Haworth's 
  or 
  Stephens' 
  

   description. 
  It 
  is 
  a 
  dark 
  female 
  ato»/rtrm, 
  but 
  not 
  "pitchy-black, 
  etc." 
  

  

  Var. 
  ? 
  or 
  new 
  species 
  ? 
  from 
  N. 
  Syria. 
  

  

  In 
  the 
  British 
  Museum 
  series, 
  are 
  four 
  specimens 
  under 
  the 
  label 
  

   E. 
  atouiaria? 
  which 
  are 
  absolutely 
  uniformly 
  rich 
  brown, 
  without 
  

   the 
  slightest 
  trace 
  of 
  light 
  ground, 
  not 
  even 
  in 
  the 
  fringes, 
  in 
  which 
  

   there 
  is 
  no 
  trace 
  of 
  chequering. 
  They 
  are 
  not 
  of 
  the 
  ab. 
  unicoloraria 
  

   character 
  at 
  all. 
  

  

  Kolenati. 
  "Mel. 
  Ent." 
  Fas., 
  v., 
  p. 
  106. 
  Insecta 
  Caucasi." 
  1846. 
  

  

  Fidonia 
  iberaria. 
  

  

  " 
  Sulphurea, 
  subtilissime 
  in 
  alis 
  sulphureis 
  fusco-conspersa, 
  in 
  

  

  