22 BARBOUR AND NOBLE — NEW FROGS AND A NEW LIZARD [Pa 
in length to the inner; tibio-tarsal articulations reach tip of snout when 
hind limbs are bent forward; and overlap considerably when they are 
bent at right angles to axis of body; skin shagreened above, with numerous 
slightly enlarged tubercles scattered over the whole dorsum; no glandular 
ridges nor dorso-lateral fold; skin underneath wholly smooth except on 
posterior aspects of the thighs, where it is finely granular. 
Color.— Light umber above, with indistinct darker marblings; tym- 
panum almost black; very dark brown spots on the sides; anterior aspects 
of thighs spotted; a narrow light line along upper lip from posterior border 
of tympanum to beneath the centre of the eye; lower lip dark brown with a 
few light spots; lower surfaces uniform dirty yellowish brown. 
Dasia moultonii sp. nov. 
Type, no. 11,203, Museum of Comparative Zoélogy, from Sadong, Sara- 
wak, Borneo, collected by Prof. Harrison W. Smith in 1912. 
Description of type.— Rostral large, separated from the frontonasal, the 
portion visible from above nearly as large as the latter shield; a pair of 
supranasals in broad contact with each other; nostril in the center of a 
single shield, nearly dividing it; a very small postnasal; frontonasal sepa- 
rated from the frontal, broader than long; prefrontals hexagonal, in con- 
tact with each other; anterior loreal in contact with the second supra- 
labial, supranasal, frontonasal and prefrontal; frontal about as long as its 
distance from the tip of the snout, slightly shorter than the length of the 
frontoparietals and interparietals together, in contact with the first, second 
and third supraoculars; four supraoculars, none greatly enlarged; a pair 
of frontoparietals, together equaling about the area of the interparietal; 
a pair of large parietals (these are the largest scales on the top of the 
head); parietals separated from each other by the interparietal, not in 
contact behind it; a single pair of nuchals; lower eyelid scaly; five supra- 
labials, second or third largest; three slightly enlarged temporals on each 
side, ear opening very small, anterior part concealed by a small lobe; 30 
seales around the middle of the body, dorsals and laterals with three very 
strong keels; preanals scarcely enlarged, the middle one largest; hind limb 
stretched forward reaches the elbow, hind limb contained slightly more 
than twice in the distance between the snout and vent; digits flattened at 
the base, the distal part compressed; 17 lamellae under the longest toe; 
tail cylindrical and pointed. 
Color.— Ground color gray-brown, lighter below; a series of dark brown 
cross-bands at regular intervals, starting behind the head and covering the 
rest of the upper surface; under part of the body not marked by these 
cross-bands, the under part of the tail faintly marked. 
Named in honor of J. C. Moulton, Esq., a kind friend to Prof. Smith and, 
through him, to the Museum of Comparative Zodlogy. 
