38 RHIN0TMETX7S. 



beating in the forests near to Constancia (the English boarding- 

 house kept by Mr. E. Heath, in the heart of the Organ Mountains), 

 December 1856. 



3. Ehinotnietus cruciatus. (Front, fig. 4.) 



E. oblongo-ovatus, subparallelus, elongatus, fulvo-pubescens, punc- 

 tato-striatus, niger ; capite antice producto et ad medium cari- 

 nato, ad basin antennarum bituberculato, fulvo-pubescenti, ad 

 basin granidato, inter oculos nigro, ad basin fusco-rufo ; thorace 

 elongato, subdepresso, lateribus parallelis, antice constricto, plus 

 minus fulvo-pubescenti, rufo, ad marg'mem et ad medium fusco ; 

 elytris robustis, distincte punctato-striatis, nigris, pilo flavo 

 testaceo brevi dense vestitis, apud Jutmeros macula subcircidari 

 nigra, et apicem juxta altera oblongo-ovali, his maculis quatuor 

 denudatis ; antennis jiliformibus, nigro-fuscis, art. 2-4 rufo 

 suffusis; pedibus nigro-fuscis, posticorum tibiis tarsisque rufo- 

 fiavescentibus. 



Long. corp. 3 lin., lat. 1 lin. 



Oblong-ovate, subparallel, subelongate, for the most part flavo- 

 fulvous, pubescent, punctate-striate, black. Head narrow (as com- 

 pared with the thorax), produced broadly in front (the labrum being 

 abruptly narrower than the apex of the head) : from the base of the 

 antennas are two. oblique carinations extending to the outer margins 

 of the labrum ; between these is a medial longitudinal carination 

 which reaches the base of the antennas ; immediately above the base 

 are two longitudinal tubercular elevations, divided the one from the 

 other by an abrupt and short fovea : eyes tolerably large and glo- 

 bose, situated at some little distance from the base of the head ; the 

 surface between the eyes is fulvo-pubescent ; at the base distinctly 

 granulated ; near the insertion of the antennas the colour is black, 

 at the base rufous or fusco-rufous. Thorax broader than the head, 

 elongate, subdepressed ; the sides parallel, constricted in front, and 

 slightly marginate; the base (when viewed laterally) is subde- 

 pressed ; the anterior angles are obsolete ; the surface is clothed 

 throughout with a fine fulvous pubescence (more distinctly near the 

 base and sides); in colour fulvo-rufous, the margins, and also a 

 medial longitudinal line, being fuscous. Scutellum triangular, im- 

 punctate, flavous. Elytra broader than the thorax, subparallel, 

 tolerably robust, rounded at the apex, punctate-striate (the striae 

 being, except at the sides, obsolete, and the punctures deep and 

 distinct) ; the colour is black, — a broad antemedial band, the apex, 

 and also the suture, being rufous ; these cause the rest of the sur- 

 face to constitute four large and subcircular black spots (those at the 



