(Page 585) 

 very small and aculelform. It is separated from C. angusticolle by, 

 that the head is larger and broader than pronotum, and that this is much 

 longer and narrower than in Coryphium , lj times as long as broad. - It 

 has its home in northern Finland and Norway, but was according to infor- 

 mations by the late Pastor Jakobsen (see Forh. at Skand. Naturf orskeres 

 meeting at Copenhagen 1847) found by him on Flommen at Sore (2. 11. 1843, 

 3 specimens). As this finding is not present in Jakobsen' s collection 

 in Zool. Museum, Copenhagen, and the species has not later been refound 

 at Sora or elsewhere in the country, it may be surmised, that Jakobsen 

 erroneously has identified Coryphium angusticolle Steph. as Boreaphllus 

 Hennlngianus Sahib. 



102. Jenus Anthophagus Jravh. 



(Uravh. Micr. 1802; Erichs. Kaf. Mk. Br. I, 614; ien. Spec. Staph. 

 847; Kraatz Ins. D. II, 912; Thorns. Skand. Col. Ill, 178; Bey Brevip. 

 1880, 9; Canglb. Kaf. M. II, 704). 



The body is flatly convex; head porrect, constricted behind forming 

 a short neck, eyes often greatly protruding, round, temples rounded off, 



(Page 586) 

 more or less convex, forehead before the closely set ocilli with two 

 liniar, sharp grooves, antennae long, filiform, mandibles more or less 

 promonent, in the Soften very strongly developed, last (fourth) joint 

 of maxillary palpi at least as long as the next-last and gradually ta- 

 pering. 



Pronotum is distinctly narrower than elytra, strongly narrowing po- 

 steriorly or rather cordate; elytra aproximately twice as long as pro- 

 notum, together with same side-margined; abdomen broad, with broadly up- 



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