Bibliographical Notices. 141 



postmedial line deep rufous, very oblique, straight, defined 

 on inner side by an apple-green band, expanding in and 

 below the cell and above inner margin. Hind wing golden 

 yellow with the terminal area rufous, broad at costa and 

 narrowing to tornus. Underside of fore wing rufous, with 

 some yellow below and just beyond the cell. 



Hab. W. Africa {Dudgeon), 1 c? type ; Uganda, Entebbe 

 (Minchin),! ?; Mashonaland (Dobbie), 1 <J . E.rp., ^40, 

 ? 50 mm. 



Somara flavicosta, sp. n. 



? . Head and thorax golden yellow, the sides of head 

 deep rufous; antennae chocolate-brown; legs fringed with 

 chocolate brown hair; abdomen golden yellow tinged with 

 rufous at extremity. Fore wing deep rufous slightly irrorated 

 with hairy yellow scales to the postmedial line, the terminal 

 area paler rufous ; a broad golden-yellow costal fascia to the 

 postmedial line, on the inner side of which it forms a band 

 extending to vein 6, then slight spots to vein 4 ; postmedial 

 line deep rufous, excurved to vein 6, then oblique and 

 slightly sinuous; cilia deep rufous. Hind wing golden 

 yellow. Underside of both wings golden yellow. 



Hab. W. Africa (Richardson), 1 ? type. Exp. 50 mm. 



[To be continued.] 



BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES. 



The South African Journal of Science, being the Organ of the South 

 African Association for the Advancement of Science. Vol. VI. 

 No. 6. April 1910. Cape Town. Price Is. 



This number contains several short papers of considerable interest, 

 chiefly, of course, relative to South Africa. Among them is one 

 by Prof. E. H. L. Schwartz, on the Bearing of Recent Theories on 

 the Nature of the Earth's Interior upon the Question of Deep 

 Mining ; but the two papers which will appeal most to the general 

 reader are perhaps those by Rev. Father Norton, on Bushmen and 

 their Relics near Modderpoort ; and on the Early Geography of 

 South Africa, and its Bearing on Bantu Ethnography. The first 

 paper is illustrated by two plates reproducing native drawings: one, 

 in brown and white, appears to represent elands ; and the other, in 

 whi'»h the figures are black, repesents cattle and other animals, and 

 a considerable number of natives in different positions. These are 

 not very dissimilar to reproductions of Lappish drawings which we 

 have seen. 



The second paper discusses the movements of natives, as indicated 

 by the maps of Thompson and Steedraan, published in 1827 and 

 1835 respectively. 



