178. Domicel- 
la. 
179. Alidras. 
180. buccatus. 
181. angula- 
tus. 
183. Berus. 
Cf 
page 218. 
184. Chersea. 
Cf 
189. caeruleus. 
190. albus. 
192. aspis. 
Cf 
193. Typhlus. 
118-60. Amoen. acad. I.p. 117. n. 5. 
Seb. mus. 1. 
White with darkish bands coming together below. 
121-58. Mus. De Geer. 
Lives in the Indies. 
Totally white. 
107-72. Mus. Ad. Fr. p. 29. 1. 19. f. 3 
Lives in the Indies. 
Dark with white bands. White head: two dark spots on top of its head and 
a triangle over its nostrils. 
120-60. Mus. Ad. Fr. I.p. 23. 1. 15. f. 1. 
Amoen. acad. 1. p. 119. n. 7. 
Seb. mus. 2. 1. 12. 1. 3. 
Lives in Asia. 
Gray-brown with dark bands. 
146-39. Faun. svec. 260. 
Amoen. acad. 1. p. 113. n. 1 
Aldr. serp. 115, 116. 
Lives in Europe. 
150-34. Faun. svec. 261. 
L. Act. stockh. 1749. p. 246. t. 6. 
Aldr. serp. 197. Rusty colored asp. 
Lives in the lowlands of Sweden; very venomous and its bite is 
frequently fatal in Sweden. Is it sufficiently different from the asp, even 
though it is smaller in our lands? 
165-24. Amoen. acad. 1. p. 303. n. 31. 
Seb. mus. 2. 1. 13. f. 3. 
Lives in America. 
Bluish-white scales on either side; below, white. 
170-20. Mus.Ad.Fr. I.p. 24.1.14. f. 2. 
Lives in the Indies. 
White, without spots. 
146-46. French "aspice" 
Lives in France. 
Reddish, with dark alternate spots flowing together into a band. 
Like Chersea, but larger. 
140-53. Mus. De Geer. 
Lives in the Indies. 
Bluish. 
