NYMPHALID.IE. — NYMPHALIN^. — ECTHALIA. 



Itordorcil with paler green ; spot eight of anterior wings distinct ; the sixtli on 

 the posterior wings absent. 



Underside as in the male, but the npper part of the submarginal row of 

 lilack spots is very nearly obsolete ; on the posterior wings, the corresponding 

 black dots are only distinct below the middle of the wing, and the live white 

 spots, though smaller (especially the fu-st), are much more sharply defined than 

 above, and a sixtli (absent above) is represented by a black dot. 



Hab. China (Moore) ; Thibet. 



In the Collections of the Hope Museum at Oxford, of Henley Grose Smith, aad others. 

 The specimens from Thibet arc larger, but present no important differences iu marking. 



III.— EUTHALIA XAEAYANA. $ . Figs. 4, 5. 



Exp. 2^ inches. 



Fcmulc. Upperside olive-green, incisions white. Anterior wings with five 

 transverse blackish lines in the cell, below the second and third of which (toge- 

 ther) is a ring and a small oval ; an oblique transverse row of six white oval 

 spots, only divided by the nervures, commencing with an oval dash on the 

 costa ; the sixth spot is narrower than the others, and curved downwards ; nearer 

 tlie apex are two more white subcostal spots; the second largest ; the apical 

 portion of the wing is darker than the rest, Init without distinct lines. 



Posterior wings with two subcostal white spots near the apex, two blackish 

 transverse lines in the cell, and two obsolete blackish undulating lines towards 

 the hind margin ; inner margin brown, fringed with tawny hairs. 



Underside of a paler blue-green, but marked nearly as above ; anterior 

 wings wdth the costa tawny, the white dash commencing the transverse row 

 absent ; the other spots slightly edged with darker, and the inner margin almost 

 entirely slaty-blue or l)lack. 



Posterior wings with irregular zigzag markings iu and above the cell, and 

 a row of five white spots running from the costa, beyond which is a row of 

 black dots. 



Hab. Burmah (Ruby Mines). 



In the Collection of Henley Grose Smith. 



Allied to E. Nara, Moore, from Sikhim. but in tliat species the spots of the auti-iior -wings 

 are much longer and broader, extending almost to the hind margin above the hinder angle, both 

 above and below ; on the posterior wings there is only one spot on the upperside, but on the 

 underside a continuous row of much larger spots nearly to the anal angle. 



