460 Mr. T. D. A. Cockerell on Fossil Arthropods 
Bartonian, Bagshot Beds; Bournemouth (J. S. Gardner). 
Brit. Mus. 19000; also 19005, which seems to be the 
reverse, or in any event the same species. 
Ny} \ ant i 
Ophryastites gardneri, Cll. 
This represents a large weevil, the whole insect doubtless 
15 mm. long in life. It is in all respects very similar to 
Ophryastes grandis, Scudd., from the Kocene of Colorado, 
but the punctures are not connected by longitudinal striz 
as in O. grandis. Ophryastites is used by Scudder for fossil 
insects of this affinity, but of uncertain generic position. 
Baris (?) paleophilus, sp.n. (Fig. 4.) 
Elytron 3°2 mm. long and about 1'7 mm. broad ; shaped 
as in B. interstitialis, Say. Convex, with ten rows of closely 
placed elongate punctures. The punctures are about 80 yu 
long, and the intervals between them are about 50. The 
rows are about 110 w apart. 
Baris (?) paleophilus, Ckl. 
Bartonian, Bagshot Beds, Bournemouth (J. S. Gardner). 
Brit. Museum, 19016. 
So far as can be seen, this might belong to Baris. There is 
a superficial resemblance to Geralophus, from the Florissant 
Miocene ; but in Geralophus the small punctures are not 
over a third as long as the distance between the rows. 
