468 Mr. ©. Butler’s List of 
The male is greyish brown above, with a submarginal 
series of sordid white lunate spots, and with a more or 
less developed orange spot on the primaries at the end 
of the cell: both sexes vary in this last character, and 
in the depth of colour on the under surface ; the species 
appears to be very common. 
LampipeEs, Hiibner. 
39. Lampides trigemmatus, n. 8. 
Allied to L. telicanus of Europe and L. cassius of 
Tropical America ; nearest to the former, from which it 
differs as follows :—Size of Spanish examples, but the 
female with barely a trace of blue colouring, excepting 
at the base ; the discal spots not distinctly visible through 
the wings; ground colour below uniformly dove-brown, 
the white stripes purer, of half the width, and sharply 
defined; the lunulate discal white stripe of the secondaries 
replaced by a series of contiguous sagittate spots ; three 
subanal metallic-green pupilled ocelli instead of two; 
expanse of wings, 1 inch. 
**Copiapo, North of Chili; abundant in January.”— 
Toe: 
The much darker coloration of the under surface, with 
the more slender and whiter lines and the three metallic 
spots on the secondaries, give this species a totally 
different aspect from that of L. telicanus, and, excepting 
in the last-mentioned character, more like that of the 
L. elpis group. 
CurysopHanus, [Tiibner. 
40. Chrysophanus bicolor. 
Lycena? bicolor, Philippi, Linn. Ent., xiv., p. 269, 
n. 8 (1860). 
2, Thecla quadrimaculata, 3 , Hewitson, Ent. Month. 
Mag., x1., p. 106 (1874). 
Chili. 
This is perfectly distinct from the following ; not only 
differing uniformly in size, but the form of the band 
across the under surface of the secondaries is different, 
and the orange spot or patch on the upper surface of the 
primaries is larger. 
