all : 
426 Mr. Butler’s Descriptions of Lepidoptera, cc. 
external fourth brassy yellow, speckled with black, and 
interrupted by a large quadrate costal patch, and an 
angulated discal patch across the median branches, the 
centre of the external area deeply sinuated internally ; 
fringe pale buff, spotted with black ; secondaries smoky 
srey, with paler striations scattered here and there all 
over the surface, those nearest the external border pale 
yellow; two slender irregular pale yellow discal lines ; 
fringe pale buff, spotted with black, the spots connected 
by a grey line; thorax smoky brown; abdomen smoky 
erey, with whitish edges to the segments; primaries 
below grey, otherwise nearly as above ; secondaries grey, 
mottled with creamy white, which merges into butt 
towards the external margin ; this mottling is confluent 
towards the base and across the disc so as to give the 
appearance of an angular central belt ; veins barred with 
black ; a black spot on the disco-cellulars ; fringe buff, 
spotted with black ; body below buff, mottled with greyish 
brown; expanse of wings, 1 inch 9 lines. 
Tokei (Fenton). 
This seems to be a tolerably common species. 
141. Thera granitalis, n. 8. 
Primaries above white, densely speckled all over with 
olive-brown, crossed at basal third by an oblique irre- 
cular white line, which unites, at its inferior extremity, 
with the inner edge of the central belt ; the latter black- 
brown, of the usual irregular form, but divided by the 
union of its white borders in the centre of the interno- 
median interspace; a sinuated white discal line and a 
marginal series of white lunules; an oblique apical 
cream-coloured dash; fringe cream-coloured, spotted 
with dark brown; secondaries greyish white; a dusky 
marginal line; body blackish, varied with grey and 
white ; under surface sericeous-white; markings in- 
distinct ; secondaries with dusky disco-cellular spot and 
slender angular post-median line; a pale greyish discal 
line ; expanse of wings, 1 inch 6 lines. 
Yokohama (H. Pryer) ; Tokei (Fenton). 
