from the Louisiade Archipelago. \Q,\ 



white ocellus and a yellow ving. The upper ocellus is placed 

 on the dark border near the edge of the ring j the lower one 

 is placed well within the dark border and is surrounded by a 

 brown outer ring. 



Head and antennse black ; thorax grey, with a black stripe 

 on each side and a broader and shorter one in the middle in 

 front ; pectus and legs brown, the proboscis and tarsi inclining 

 to reddish ; palpi and abdomen bright yellow, the palpi 

 blackish above. 



" Normunby Island, Oct. 30, 1888." 



Allied to T. catops^ originally described by Prof. West- 

 wood from a specimen from New Ireland, in Boisduval's 

 collection. The only specimen in the British Museum 

 agreeing with the description of T. catops is a female from 

 Port Moresby, from which T. fimbriata differs in the broader 

 marginal markings, the lower ocellus, which is nearly as large 

 as the upper one, though much smaller in T. catops^ and, 

 what is probably of much greater consequence, the absence of 

 any yellow colouring towards the inner margin of the hind 

 wings. 



11. Tenaris harhata, 



Exp. al. 83 millim. 



Male. — Pure white ; fore wings with the inner margin con- 

 vex beyond the base, the costa and apex narrowly and evenly 

 edged with black, ceasing at the extremity of the first disco- 

 cellular nervule ; hind wings narrowly dusted with blackish 

 at the tip as far as the second subcostal nervule, and again 

 from the anal angle halfway along the inner margin, the upper 

 ocellus showing indistinctly through, but the black, blue- 

 dusted lower ocellus with its white pupil well marked, thougii 

 the outer rings are less distinct ; at the base is a large brush 

 of reddish-brown hair, and the hair between the median and 

 first submedian nervures is yellow for a third of the length 

 of the wing and white beyond ; the hair between the first 

 and second submedian nervures, parallel to the dusky stripe 

 on the inner margin, is also reddish brown. 



Underside : fore wings as above ; hind wings with the 

 whole of the base from the costa to the inner margin yellow, 

 slightly interrupted at the base of the cell; ocelli of moderate 

 size, black, with inner crescents of blue dusting, and white 

 pupils ; the concentric rings are yellow and brown ; the u})po£ 

 ocellus is so close to the tip of the wing that the costa cuts 

 off half the upper edge of the outer brown ring ; the lower 

 ocellus is placed near but well within the hind margin, 

 Ann, & Mag. N. Hist. Ser, G. Vol. iv, 11 



