586 CLASS 1X. 
abdomen. Mandibles monodactylous. Palps spinose. Ocelli eight, 
situated at the anterior part of cephalothorax; the two middle 
approximate on a common tubercle ; three on each side marginal, 
disposed in a triangle. ‘Two anterior feet longer, with tarsi claw- 
less, slender, multiarticulate. 
Phrynus Otty. (Species of Phalangium L., Tarantula Fasr. 
in part). Palps supplied at the apex with a horny claw, of the 
length of body or longer than body. First pair of feet slender, 
very long, resembling antenna, with tibie and tarsi multiarticulate. 
Body depressed. Cephalothorax broad, semicircular, emarginate 
posteriorly. 
Sp. Phrynus lunatus, Phalangium lunatum Paut., Phalangiwm reniforme 
L. (in part), Patuas Spicil. Zool, 1x. Tab. 3, fig. 5, Hurssr Natursyst. der 
ungefl. Ins. 1. Berlin, 1797, Tab. m11., Latr., Hist. nat. des Orust. et des 
Ins. Pl. 61, fig. 1;—Phrynus reniformis, Phalangium reniforme PAu. (not 
L.), Spic. Zool. Tab. cit. fig. 3, Dumirm Cons. gén. s. l. Ins. Pl. 56, 
fig. 2, &e. 
Comp. J. VAN DER Hoeven, Bijdragen tot de kennis van het geslacht 
Phrynus, Tijdschr. voor nat. Geschied. en Physiol. 1x. pp. 68—9gt. Pl. 1. 11. 
Telyphonus LAtR. (Species of Phalangium L., Tarantula Fasr. 
in part). Palps thick, terminated by hand didactylous, shorter 
than body. First pair of feet with tarsi eight-joited, and tibia 
with two joints. Cephalothorax oblong, oval, not broader than 
abdomen. Abdomen terminated by an articulate seta. 
Sp. Telyphonus proscorpio Latr., Phalangium caudatum L., Spic. Zool. 1x. 
Tab. 3, figs. 1, 2, GuéRIN Iconogr., Arach. Pl. 3, fig. 3 (is it the same 
species ?) ; hab. in Java. 
Note.—The species of this, as well as of the preceding genus, are difficult 
to distinguish. They are found in tropical regions of both hemispheres: 
none European is known. On the Zelephont comp. Lucas in GUERIN 
Magas. de Zool. 1835. Arachn. Pl. 8—10. 
Family XIV. Scorpiones. Abdomen sessile. Stigmata four 
on each side, in the second, third, fourth and fifth ventral scuta. 
Mandibles didactylous. Palps longer than feet, terminated by 
hand didactylous with external finger mobile. Six last segments of 
abdomen abruptly narrowed, resembling a tail; last segment vesi- 
cular, terminated by an incurved sting. Feet increasing in length 
from the first towards the last pair, moderate, all biunguiculate at 
the apex. Two pectinate appendages, with teeth different in number, 
