28 Notes on the Lepidoptera of America. 
nervule, and regarded as thrown off at the same point with 
the third m. nervule from the main nervure. From Mr. 
Walker’s descriptions in this genus, none of the above described 
species of Ellopia can be properly referred as intended by the 
British Entomologist. 
Evprruecia, Curtis. 
Eupithecia geminata. 
Larentia geminata, nobis, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., Vol. 6, p. 29, 
Plate 3, fig. 6, ¢ (May, 1866). 
Eupithecia anguilineata, n. s. 
(Plate 16, fig. 12, *.) 
4. Head, greenish white; a narrow black frontal line before 
antennal insertion; antennae, simple, blackish, finely closely and 
regularly sub-annulate with whitish. Thorax, above, greenish ; 
latterly, the tegulae are distinctly marked with black. Abdomen, 
cinereous, as long as internal margin of secondaries, with superior 
blackish segmentary linear marks. Labial palpi, black at the tips, 
whitish beneath. Under thoracic and abdominal parts, whitish 
cinereous. Legs, cinereous; tibiae and tarsi, black, constrictedly 
sub-annulate with whitish. 
Anterior wings, whitish, everywhere prominently shaded with 
green of an olivaceous tinge, and with black and powdery mark- 
ings. At extreme base, a black nervular mark. A broken, narrow, 
black, transverse basal line, succeeded by a broad distinct oliva- 
ceous green shade, in turn followed by a powdery band of black 
scales, more distinct on costa and hardly attaining internal margin 
and which precedes an excavate, narrow, black, transverse anterior 
line, the latter obsolete before internal margin. Median space 
with a distinct anterior greenish transverse shade, which fuses, on 
internal margin, with the first distinct similarly colored transverse 
shade. A narrow median black line, marked by black dots on the 
“veins,” and apt to become obsolete on the dise and superiorly ; 
below the median nervure this forms a more or less evident 3, 
