PAPILIONIDZ®—PAPILIO. 
also yellow. Parallel and near to the outer margin, there is a narrow band of brown, 
lighter than the rest of the wing, accompanied on its mer edge by a band of black. 
Posterior wing tailed with a Similar submarginal broken band of light brown, 
traversed by a Tine of black, with between it and the margin four lunular spots of 
blue. A band of crimson from the anal angle to the middle of the wing, and below 
it on the inner margin a lunular spot of yellow. 
The tail, which is s long, tipped with yellow. 
UNDERSIDE, as above. except that the posterior wing has a narrow line of crimson, 
scarcely divided into spots—from the anal angle to the costal margin, parallel and very 
near to the edge of the central yellow. 
Expan. 3.9. im. Hab. New Granada. 
In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 
Although described by Godart there is no published figure of this species, ] have therefore 
thought it of use to place it in close proximity to the new species, to show the great resemblance 
which they bear to each other, as well as the difference of form. I have not seen females of either 
species. 
PAPILIO EURYLEON, 6. 
Uprrrsipr. Male, black. Anterior wing with a large green-white spot near 
the middle of the inner margin, trifid by the nervures. Three small indistinct white 
spots near the inner angle and the outer margin. Posterior wing with a central spot 
of crimson of three nearly equal parts, with between it and the anal angle one or two 
small spots of the same colour. The outer margin with the usual lunular white spots, 
and parallel and near to them a row of similar white lunules, but less distinct, with 
the exception of the two nearest the apex, which are large. 
Unversipg. Anterior wing spotless, with the exception of the small spots near 
the inner angle. The posterior wing has, instead of the trifid crimson spot, two 
round pink-white spots, which are placed between the median nervules, the two red 
spots as above at the anal angle, two red spots at the base of the wing, the marginal 
and submarginal row of w hite Iunules as on the upperside, and above “and parallel to 
them (but not extending to the two large spots near the apex), a third row of in- 
distinct crimson lunules or spots. 
Thorax underneath, with some red spots. Several of the folds of the abdomen 
near the anus marked with light red. 
Expan. 352; to 33°; m. Hab. New Granada. 
Tn the Collection of W. C. Hewitson and W. W. Saunders. 
There is a variety of this species without the small white spots of the anterior wing, and without 
the submarginal lunules of the posterior wing, the two apical spots scarcely seen. 
This species seems equally to represent two groups. In colour, it resembles the nineteenth 
group of Boisduval, in which are Proteus and Vertumnus. In form, and the arrangement of the red 
and white lunules on the underside of the posterior wing, it is more like Choridamas and Hyperion 
of his twenty-second group. 
