106 Records of the Indian Museum. (Vor. VII, 
The colour of the legs of the Indian Museum specimen are 
uniformly pale as in H. saxatilis, but the specimen agrees per- 
fectly with H. sylvaticus and not with H. saxatilis in structure.! 
@. Length of carapace 9°o—9'5 mm.; maximum breadth 
5mm. Colour and texture of integuments as in the male except for 
the absence of any sign of the extraordinary rugosity of the sides 
of the anterior abdominal sterna found in that sex. Trochanter 
of arm with five distinct teeth above and two below; femur 
shorter than in male, armed with several strong granules on the 
inner side above and one tooth below; tibia and hand as in the 
preceding species. Second (i.e. first visible) abdominal sternum 
scarcely half as long as broad, distinctly and more or less abruptly 
produced in the middle ; one pair of distinct but very broad and 
shallow circular impressions present. 
Hi. stoliczkae, n. sp. 
The three specimens (@, 2, and juv.) from which this spe- 
cies is described are all from Punkarbari, and are apparently 
those from that locality referred to by Stoliczka (1873, pp. 127 
and 134—136) under the name Thelyphonus (conf.) angustus. 
Oates (1889, p. 6) states that these are referable to the young of 
Uroproctus assamensis, a species which they resemble in the pres- 
ence of a tooth on the inner side of each coxal process of the arm. 
Of the ridge between the median and lateral eyes there is however 
no trace. As the species isobviously related to forms belonging to 
the Burmese genus Hypoctonus (especially H. wood-masom) and 
not to those of the South Indian genus Labochirus I have referred 
it to the genus Hypoctonus in spite of the presence of teeth on 
the coxal process, although this will necessitate a revision of the 
generic definition. 
Description—ao. Length of thorax 12 mm., maximum 
breadth 7 mm. Colour dark brown throughout. Carapace 
granular (almost spinulose) throughout, granules coarser in front 
than behind ;.trochanters and femora of 2—~4th legs and tibia of 4th 
legs granular above ; arms, except their coxae Pen are striate and 
sparsely punctured, and inner side of remaining joints strong- 
ly granular, abdominal terga also granular throughout ; abdominal 
sterna granular at sides oniy, those of the first three ventrally 
visible segments being much more coarsely marked than the rest 
and almost rugose. Coxal process of arms with one or two * more 
or less distinct teeth on the inner margin near the apex and some- 
times one on the outer margin also, one tooth also dorsal to base 
of coxal process; trochanter armed with one or two teeth below 
and five somewhat obscure teeth above, anterior surface with 
rows of denticles ; femur moderately stout, its free inner margin 
| This is not the only case in which I have found the colour of the legs to be 
misleading. Structure I believe to be aloue reliable. 
2 The two arms of the single specimen before me differ greatly in the extent 
to which they are armed with spines and teeth. 
