\iaa's = 
4 
Marcz 8, 1916 Vot. VI, pp. 19-22 
PROCEEDINGS 
OF THE 
NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 
NEW AMPHIBIANS AND A NEW REPTILE FROM 
SARAWAK. 
BY THOMAS BARBOUR AND GLADWYN KINGSLEY NOBLE. 
Frew Americans have journeyed as extensively and intelligently 
in Upper Borneo as has Prof. Harrison W. Smith (Harvard, 1895). 
A facile knowledge of the Malay and Dyak idioms and the friend- 
ship and respect of European residents, have made him a welcome 
sojourner in the land, and he would, we are sure, have us convey 
his thanks for many courtesies to His Highness The Radja, to 
Capt. J. C. Moulton, formerly Curator of the Kuching Museum 
but now with his regiment in India, and to many other helpful 
friends. A few years ago (1912) Smith returned with a beautifully 
preserved collection containing, among others, such rarities as 
Lanthanotus, Calophrynus, and Microhyla leucostigma, but because 
of his plans to return again to Borneo no report was made upon 
the material. This year he has given to the Museum of Compara- 
tive Zoélogy, besides an excellent series of mammals, birds and 
insects, a far larger collection of reptiles and amphibians taken 
principally in the zodlogically wholly unknown region about the 
Limbang and Madalam River districts and near Mount Mulu in 
northern central Sarawak. Since during the last few years Borneo 
