10 GLENEA HASSELTI. 
two type-specimens from the collection of Mr. René Oberthür 
before me, and agreeing with it in form and in the dis- 
position and shape of the pattern, but at once distinguished 
by the orange-brown color of the hairy spots on the thorax 
and elytra, which spots are chalky white in Glenea Juno. 
Dark violet-blue. The face with two white lines begin- 
ning at the base of the clypeus, bordering the inner orbits 
and disappearing in the emargination of the eyes; moreover 
a transverse white stripe is present at the sides of the head 
a little above the base of the mandibles. The head is covered 
with large and deep punctures on the face between the 
white lines and on the vertex, which latter is dull black 
with two slightly divergent smooth lines; beneath and 
behind the eyes the head is glossy and impunctate. The 
three basal joints of the antennae are glossy dark blue, 
the remainder joints dull black in consequence of the co- 
vering pile. 
The pronotum is provided on each side of the base with 
a broad triangular spot of orange-brown hairs, which spots 
are nearly contiguous in front of the scutellum; in fresh 
specimens these spots are narrowly prolonged to the front 
margin of the thorax and even continued on the head; a 
stripe of whitish hairs is present just above the anterior 
coxae. The prothorax is somewhat longer than broad, sub- 
cylindrical, slightly narrowing in straight lines from the 
bisinuate base to the straight front margin; the disk is 
irregularly covered with large and deep punctures, which 
leave however a raised line along the middle free; the 
sides are smooth, nearly impunctate. The scutellum is 
elongate triangular with narrowly rounded tip, broadly 
impressed along the middle and provided on the tip with 
a white pubescence. 
The elytra are provided on the middle with a cross- 
shaped figure of orange-brown hairs, which figure is common 
to both elytra and divided by the suture; the longitudinal 
stripe is narrow, the transverse one broad, and the entire 
figure is broadly surrounded with a black velvety pubes- 
Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XV. 
