10 LEPIDOPTERA INDICA. 
Tyraco.—Male. Upperside dark olivescent ochreous-brown, with an senescent 
gloss ; cilia alternated with white. Forewing with a transverse inwardly-oblique 
discal straight dusky glandular fascia, which extends from the upper median to the 
posterior margin; two very indistinct slender dusky bars crossing the cell, a 
similar discocellular bar, and an upper outer-discal outwardly-recurved line, the 
latter with a slightly paler external bordering edge; beyond is a suffused sub- 
marginal line ; a moderately large prominent subapical black ocellus and a minute 
apical ocellus, each with a white pupil and narrow ochreous outer ring. Hindwing 
with two, sometimes three, similar outer ocelli, the lowest, and when present the 
upper, being the smallest. Underside pale brownish-grey. forewing with the 
lower discal area suffused with bright ochreous ; markings as on upperside, with 
the cell bars, discal and submarginal line prominent, dark brown, and externally 
bordered with pale grey, the inner cell-bar extending across the wing; ocelli 
prominent. Hindwing crossed by a subbasal and a discal irregular recurved 
ochreous-brown line ; a series of six prominent ocelli, the sixth duplex, each with 
two pale ochreous rings and two brown rings; marginal lines pale grey 
bordered. 
Female paler. Forewing with a broad inverted-pyriform bright ochreous ex- 
terior patch, on which the two ocelli are very prominent, the patch traversed by 
the brown veinlets and the large ocellus inwardly bordered by an incurved brown 
streak. Hindwing with the ocelli as in male, but more prominent. Underside 
as in the male. Thorax above clothed with virescent-brown hairs ; body beneath 
brownish-grey ; legs above brown; palpi clothed with brownish-grey hairs; collar 
and side of palpi greyish-white ; antennz dark brown, annulated with white. 
Expanse.—d ? 1& to 22 inches. 
Hasirar.—N.-W. Himalayas ; (? Beluchistan). 
Distrisution.—* According to Col. A. M. Lang’s MS. notes, this species is 
very local, and seems to have its headquarters at Pangi, in Middle Kunawur, and 
to disappear within fifteen miles on either side. On the Werang Pass, nearly 
14,000 feet high, and about twelve miles from here, Tibetwards, I have taken this 
insect in June and July.” Col. Lang also obtained it at Chini, 9000 feet, in 
September. Major Hellard took it at Pangi in July and August. Mr. L. de 
Nicéville (Butt. Ind. 181) observes that ‘‘it is found in the Pangi and Chini 
districts in June and July, but it appears to be local, and nowhere very common. 
I took a male at Nurla, Ladak, on July 5th, and two females at Chanagund and 
Charjil, Ladak, in June and July; these were all the specimens I saw, the ex- 
tremely scanty vegetation of this dry and barren region not being favourable to an 
abundant insect fauna.” 
A female specimen, doubtfully referable to this species, and differing from 
