Clinidium Guiluingii described. 9 
tibus ?* trapezatis. Mentum latum, utrinqué tumidum. Gula tumida. 
Collum capite dimidio angustius.¢ Antenne robuste capite longiores : 
articulis transverso-subglobosis, coronula setularum cinctis. Prothorax 
oyalis, quasi pulvinatus. Elytra profundé suleata, vel porcata : porcis 
sex elevatis ; intermediis abbreviatis, duabus longioribus : apice connatis. 
Apex ipse et basis coleoptrorum apud suturam in foveam magnam et 
profundam excavati. Tarsi reliquo corpore minus nigri, subsetacei, 
subtds haud pulvillati, hirsutuli. .4bdomen ventre medio longitudinali- 
prominulo: segmento ultimo tuberculo nitido armato. SecA 0 
ar. 3. Atro-castaneum, calcaribus minoribus. An idem nuper decla- 
ratum ? f 
wy ie : + 
| Pehl ve 
Fig. 1 48 aerate A a nue se in ij 
> git very highly magnified. _ i i 
a, The space supposed to represent the eye. ‘4 
b. The pecten of the Cubitus. 1} ery Fis 
c. One of the triple spurs that arm the tibi a. ap Res 
Fig. 2. The under side of ditto. iy Si 
a. The prosternum. 
b. The mesosternum, 
c. The metasternum. 
d. The umbilicus. 
e. The eye-space. 
Fig. 3. The space supposed to represent the eye, very highly magnified. 
Fig. 4. The neck and part of the head as exhibited by the specimen 
sent to Barham. 
a. Part of the head, 
b. The neck. 
* It seems to me very doubtful whether this space, which occupies the sides 
of the head, both above and below, does really represent the eyes, its quadran- 
gular shape and levigated surface do not favour that idea, and it is too near the 
occiput. See Plate II, Fig. 2. e. and 3. 
+ Mr. Guilding, in the particulars he has added to my original description, 
and of which I have, in most cases, availed myself, describes the neck by the 
term latum, and his figure so represents it; but in my specimen it is not so 
wide, and rather longer in proportion, (Fig. 4.)so that it must either be a dis- 
tinct species, or perhaps the other sex. 
