OTIOH 1 1 V N < 1 1 1 1 >- !•: — I'K< >M HCOI'I N 1 . ( )3 



l(Ui<:-itU(Iin;il. twice as (U'ep as-tlio stri:c and separated hy abdiit their owii 

 len<'tli ill tlic stri;e; besides this, tliou;^!! none of tlie speeiinens show it well, 

 the elytra are thinly clothed with short, rather coarse hairs, which, iicrhaps, 

 liave a loii^^ntudiiial arraiigeineut in the interspaces, one row, especially, in 

 the iniiMle of the same. 



Leng-th, excludiiiLi rostrum, I)'""'; rostrum, \-2f)'""\ 



Florissant, Colorado. I'light specimens, Nos. I 7 l_* and l<;7."), -liOh^CtCtCA), 

 82(13, .Sr)27, 13(562, and of the IVinceton Collection, Nos. l..33ti, 1.5")0 and 

 1.620. Nos. 465, 8525, 13()3(; may also Ixdouf;- here, hut are too imperfect 

 to decide. 



EUUOMUS PINGUIS. 



PI. II,- Fig. 9. 



The sculpturing of the surface is very much the same as in the pre- 

 ceding- species, Imt with perhaits slightly less ditt'erence between tliat of the 

 head and thorax; there is a slight median carina on the head and thorax. 

 Elytra almost twice as long as the re.st of the body, the ro.strum and head 

 being a litth^ shorter than in /•-'. rohustus; tlie punctures of the elytral stria- 

 are more distinctly elongated than in that species, and so separated by a 

 narrower sjiace; there is a row of median hairs in eacli interspace, the 

 hairs half as long as the width of the interspace, and there are, besides, some 

 other indifferently scattered hairs. 



Length, excluding rostrmn, lOo"""; rostrum, 11'"'". 



I'loiissant, Colorado. Three specimens, Nos. 473U, 4904, and from the 

 Princeton collection, Nos. 1.531 and 1.548. 



EUCHYPTLIS (ev, HpvTTT.k), gen. nov. 



Tliis genus is more nearly allied to the preceding than to any of the 

 living members of the tribe, but has not so markedly rolnist a form, being 

 in this respect more like Kudiagogus. It has, however, a much stouter 

 rostrum than Kudonuis, and a differently formed and smaller eye. The ros- 

 trum is as long as the head, and, wliile no stontt-r at tip than in I'.iidoiuu.s, 

 enlarges so nuich basally that here it is exceptionally stout. The eyes are 

 large, transverse, situated high up, Itut very liroadly and regularly obovate, 



