398 Dr. J. L. Hancock's Further Studies of 



third ; tlie first and second pulvilii minute subobsolete, the third 

 longer than tlie rest. 



The type is G. harri, described herewith. 



1. G. hurri, sp. no v. (Plate XXII, fig. 5.) 



Stature very small, fuscous, body destitute of ramose process and 

 spiniform tubercles, but tomentose and scabrous ; vertex very wide, 

 more than twice the width of one of the moderately small globose 

 eyes, trituberculate in front, the middle tubercle little produced, 

 occiput mammiliforrn on each side ; frontal scutellum widely 

 separated concave between the antenna*, the facial costa above between 

 the eyes subobsolete, facial profile advanced beyond the eyes, the 

 rami distinctly protuberant between the antenna?. Pronotum 

 scabrous, anteriorly truncate, between the ehoiilders compresso- 

 gibbose, the summit slightly sinuate, behind the gibbosity llattened 

 declivous, bearing a tubercle on each side ; median carina very 

 uneven ; prozonal carinte abbreviated and somewhat tuberculiform ; 

 dorsum over process nearly horizontal ; lateral carina? distinct and 

 armed with minute setie, apex of process emarginate, not extended 

 to the apices of the hind femora ; lateral margins at the middle 

 distinctly elevated and tuberculate. Elytra and wings wanting. 

 Margins of femora armed with minute setfc, superior margin of 

 anterior femora distinctly compressed bilobate, the inferior margins 

 bidentate, the denticle behind the apex prominent, middle femoral 

 margins bi- or trilobate above and below ; posterior femora having 

 the external pagina? nodulose, the external carina; below the middle 

 obtuse tuberculate, the anterior half of femora ampliate, the posterior 

 half reduced, the triangular antegenicular lobe more prominent than 

 the genicular lobes ; spines of posterior tibi.e valid ; first articles of 

 jjosterior tarsi little longer than the third. 



Entire length of body, male, 7 mm. ; pronotum 4'5 mm. ; posterior 

 femora 47 mm. 



One example, No. 9*346, from Piindahioya, Ceylon, 

 collected by E. E. Groeu; presented by Malcolm Burr 

 to the University Museum, Oxford. 



This interesting species is dedicated to the distinguished 

 orthopterist, Mr. Malcolm Burr. 



Genus Dasyleurotettix, E,chu. 



1. D. curriei, Rehn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 

 pp. 658-G59, 1904. 



Two male examples, Nos. 5836 and 5837, from S.E. 



