Butterflies collected in Chili. 461 
olive-brown, speckled with dark brown; a large bi- 
pupillated black subapical ocellus with rather narrow 
yellow iris ; secondaries pale olive-brown, speckled with 
blackish ; an acutely zigzag arched black line beyond 
the cell, beyond which the wing is rather paler, and 
crossed by whitish veins (although not conspicuously as 
in Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides) ; an arched discal series 
of seven well-defined black-edged snow-white spots; 
body brown ; expanse of wings, 1 inch 10 lines. 
“Very local, but plentiful in certain spots on the 
mountains above the Baths of Chillan in March.”—T". EL. 
The sexes of this species are alike ; the only difference 
in the female being the slightly superior size of the 
ferruginous markings above and of the white spots below. 
Neosatyrus, Wallengren. 
23. Neosatyrus ambioriz. 
Neosatyrus ambiorix, Wallengr., Wien. ent. Monatschr., 
iv., p. 86, n. 14 (1860) ; Eug. Resa, pl. vi., fig. 2 
(1861). 
“‘Common among ‘ coligne’ (arborescent grass), Val- 
paraiso ; October—December.”—T. E. 
The orange patch on the upper surface of the primaries 
is larger in the females than in some of the males; in 
the latter, however, it varies considerably, sometimes 
almost disappearing ; the female, on the under surface, 
differs from the male in having two additional ocelli 
contiguous to and below the subapical one. 
24. Neosatyrus minimus, n.s. (Pl. XXL, fig. 7). 
3. Allied to the preceding, but of only half the size ; 
the wings of a paler and more olivaceous-brown, with 
vivid greenish reflections, which in certain lights change 
to cupreous ; the base of the costa and the discoidal cell 
obscurely sprinkled with ferruginous atoms ; thorax dark 
grey, the tegule fringed at the extremities with ferru- 
ginous; abdomen brown; wings below olive-brown ; 
primaries with a large ferruginous patch covering the 
greater part of the cell and the area immediately beyond 
it; a large subapical bipupillated black ocellus with orange 
iris (and in the type a second extremely minute ocellus 
near the external angle); an ill-defined submarginal 
