474 Mr. E. I. Pocock on a new Species of GcXom&c'is,. 



tooth behind and on the inner side of the large tooth ; the 

 immovable dactylus with two teeth in front of the largest 

 tooth ; behind the largest tooth on the outer side is a series of 

 six teeth and on the inner side a series of four teeth ; the 

 hinder margin of the space between these teeth furnished with 

 two or three denticles. 



Under surface of the penultimate segment of the palpus 

 armed with many spines, interspersed with coarser and finer 

 hairs. 



Tibiae of second and third pair of legs armed distally with 

 a single spine ; proximal tarsal segment of second and third 

 pairs armed with six or seven spines above and the second 

 pair with a single distal spine behind. 



Fourth pair of legs not spined. 



Measurements in millimetres of male specimen. — Length of 

 chelicera 13^, of cephalic plate 6, of abdomen 20 ; total length 

 42^ ; length of maxillary palpi 20 ; width of cephalic plate 

 9^, of abdomen 10^. 



A single specimen from Kohat, in the Punjab. Collected 

 and presented to the British i\luseum by Lieut. A. Gra3me 

 Batten. 



This species may be recognized by having the anterior 

 half of the upper surface of the abdomen black and the pos- 

 terior half white or rather testaceous. 



LXI. — A new Species of Glomeris/ro?« Borneo. By R. I. 

 Pocock, of the British Museum (Natural History). 



Olomeris concolor^ sp. n. 



Colour wholly pale testaceous above and beneath. Tergites 

 exceedingly finely and closely punctured. The nuchal plate 

 marked with two parallel strige ; the first tergite laterally with 

 about nine fine stria? and on the vertex with about six ; the 

 rest of the tergites with two striae. 



Eye on each side composed of nine ocelli, eight in a gently 

 curved longitudinal series and one on the outer side of the 

 upper end of the series. 



A single female specimen in the Museum Collection, pre- 

 served in alcohol, and brought from Borneo by the Rev. G. 

 Brown. 



This species resembles Glomeris carnifex * in possessing 

 a large number of strife on the first dorsal plate. It differs 

 from all the species of the genus in being coloured through- 

 out of a uniform testaceous tint. 



* Pocock, Journ. Linn. Soc. xxi. p. 290. 



