ItHOMBORRniJfA. 87 



d" . The abdomen is slightly ai'ched aud channelled beneath, 

 and the anteonal club of moderate length. 

 Lencjtli 3G mm. 

 ASSAM : Shillong. 

 Type in coll. Moser. 

 I have seen only the unique type-specimen. 



58. Rhomborrliina niicrocephala. 



IlhomboiThina micvocephala, Westw.,* Arcana Ent. \, 1842, p. 119, 



pi. 30, tig. 3 ; Thorns. Tiipi Ceton. 1878, p. 8. 

 Anomalocera mearesi, Barm, (nee Hope), Ilandh. Ent. iii, 1842, 



1). 781. 



Deep olive-brown, with an opalescent lustre, the head, legs and 

 lower surface deep green, and the tarsi and antenna? black. 



The body is very smooth and glossy, oval in shape and not very 

 flat. The head is small and narrow, the clypens rather longer than 

 it is broad, very slightly dilated in front, \\'\t\\ the margins straight 

 and the surface even and tinely punctured. The prothorax is 

 triangular, excessively finely punctured, and the scuteJhtm scarcely 

 punctured. The elytra are rugose at the margins posteriorly, the 

 rugosity resolving itself into punctures which become finer ante- 

 riorly and vanish about the middle of the elytra. The pyfjidiuni 

 is rather finely rugose. The sternal process is small, narrow and 

 bluntly pointed at the end. The metastenmni and abdomen are 

 sparsely punctured at the sidas. 



cJ. The abdomen is arched but not channelled beneath, and 

 the club of the antenna is not long. 



Lemjtli 28-30 mm. ; breadth 14-15"5 mm. 



Himalayas. 



Type in the Oxford Museum; cotype in coll. Janson. 



59. Rhomborrhina glaberrima. 



Anomalocera glaberrima, Westiv.,* Arcana Ent. i, 1842, p. 136, 



pl.34,%. 1. 

 Corvpliocera hirtiventris, Redt.,* Ilnqel s luiscJomr, iv (2), 1848, 



p! 528. 



Deep green, greenish purple, or purplish black. 



Moderately convex and elongate in shape, and very smooth and 

 glossy. The clypeus is flat, finely and closely punctured, rather 

 narrow, parallel-sided, and as long as it is broad, measured from 

 the point of insertion of the antenna. T\\q jyrothorax is triangular, 

 with the sides nearly straight and the upper surface quite smooth 

 and unpunctured, except for a few fine punctures at the sides. 

 The elytra are also quite smooth, except for an incomplete series 

 of punctures upon each, adjoining the suture, and the posterior 

 margins, which are rugose and thinly clothed with yellow hairs. 

 The pygkUiim is rugose and rather thickly clothed with similar 



