Dr. A. G. Butler on Lepidoptera from Chili. 461 
the two inner ones rufous brown, enclosing a white belt 
striated with ferruginous, and divided by rufous-brown veins ; 
the third line slaty grey; the interval between the second and 
third lines also white, similarly interrupted to the belt already 
mentioned, but interrupted below the subcostal vein by a 
patch of greyish coffee-brown ; the costal extremities of all 
three lines commencing in oblique quadrate ferruginous spots, 
separated by similarly shaped white spots, one of which also 
follows the third line; external third coffee-reddish, slightly 
suffused with greyish and sericeous; an almost triangular 
patch of white, striated with fine lines of the ground-colour, 
tapering from costa; fringe interrupted by lunate white spots: 
secondaries sericeous white, traversed from about the middle 
of abdominal margin by two subparallel well separated grey 
lines, which become indistinct and are angulated towards 
costa; the inner line less defined than the outer; abdominal 
and external areas suffused with rosy coffee-brown, darkest at 
anal angle; fringe rufous brown, interrupted by white 
lunules: body ferruginous, the abdomen sericeous and paler 
than the thorax. Wings below paler than above, with the 
markings more sharply defined ; the apical patch and costa of 
the primaries ochreous; the basal area whitish; the second- 
aries almost like the primaries in character, sparsely striated 
with ferruginous: the frons and palpi deep ferruginous; the 
body whitish, densely irrorated with ferruginous at the sides ; 
the legs white, clouded with ferruginous externally and regu- 
larly spotted with dark rufous brown. lixpanse of wings 
35 millim. 
No. 140. 
The form of this species corresponds with that of my 
Azelina corticalis, but the pattern and colouring are unique. 
22. Perusia precisarta, Herrich-Nchiiffer. 
Perusia precisarva, Herrich-Schifter, Auss. Schmett. fig. 415. 
& 2. Nos. 1 and 2. 
23. Casbia lapidea, Butler. 
Tephrina tapidea, Butler, Trans. Ent. Soc. 1882, p. 378. n. 56. 
No. 8. I think this insect would have been better left in 
Tephrina than in Casbia; but it is more convenient for 
purposes of reference to follow Warren’s arrangement. 
24. Scordylia vittata, Philippi. 
Euchidia vittata, Philippi, Linnea Entom. xiv. p. 295. n. 32 (1860), 
No. 1383. I cannot follow Warren in calling this genus 
