species of Galeodides. 419 
Natursyst. des Ungefliigelten Insecten, p. 37, pi. 4, 
%.2. 
Red Sea ; Cape of Good Hope. B.M. 
5. Galeodes Bengalensis, n. sp. p. 415, figs. 3, Sa, 35. 
Allied to G. araneoides and fatalis, but with the head 
and mandibles comparatively larger than in either, the 
cephalothorax broader in front and narrower behind, the 
legs thicker. 
Colours: testaceous, the mandibles castaneous, becoming 
black at the tips. 
Toothing of mandibles : upper, seven short and three 
long teeth, thus : uu — u — u — uuu; lower, two long and 
two short, thus : — u u — ;* the arrangement in G. fatalis 
is— u — uu-uuuin the upper mandible, the lower being 
— u u — as in the present species. Length of body, includ- 
ing mandibles, 1 inch 4 lines. 
Bengal, W. Masters. 1 specimen. B.M. 
6. Galeodes fatalis. 
Solpuga fatalisy Herbst and Lichtenstein, Natur- 
syst. des Ungefliigelten Inseckten, p. 32, pi. 1, fig. 1 
(1797). 
Bengal; India? B.M. 
7. Galeodes orientalis. p. 415, fig. 2, mandibles. 
Galeodes orientalis, Stoliczka, Jouni. Asiat. Soc. 
Bengal, 38, 2, p. 209, pi. 18, figs. 4 and 5 (1868). 
Bengal, Stoliczka ; Madras. B.M. 
8. Galeodes gryllipes. 
Galeodes gryllipes, Gervais, Soc. pliil. de Paris, 
in Joum. I'lnst. p. 72 (1842). 
Solpuga gryllipes, Gervais, Apt. 3, p. 91, n. 14 
(1844). 
" Martinique," Gervais, sp. ead.? B.M. 
The type appears to be in the British Museum collec- 
tion ; if so, it must be the species to which I have referred 
the above name ; it is not, however, labelled by Gervais, 
and no locality is attached to it. 
* I am compelled to use these signs to indicate the relative lengths of the 
teeth, as I know of no others that can be substituted for them. 
