Bibliographical Notice. 247 



another curved thick line just beyond middle; fainter lines 

 on each side of it ; the grey area is more broadly darkened 

 before the yellow margin, and distinctly crenulate. Under- 

 side duller. 



Huancabamba, N.E. Peru, 5000-6000 feet, January 1906 ; 

 one <$ . 



Amaurinia fulva, sp. n. 



<$ $ . 25 mm. — Face dark fulvous ; fillet snow-white ; 

 head, thorax, and abdomen greyish fulvous. Fore wing 

 bright pale fulvous, the basal area and costal region suffused 

 with dull rufous brown ; the lines dark brown, outcurved 

 and waved, slightly bent below costa and below middle, at 

 nearly even distances apart on costa, but the postmedian 

 approaching median below middle ; a dark brown linear 

 cell-spot just beyond antemedian line ; terminal line dark 

 brown ; fringe dull yellow. Hind wing with two brown 

 lines, the inner very faintly curved, nearly straight, the 

 outer at or slightly beyond middle of wing; angled or 

 strongly bent on M l ; terminal area with three or four very 

 faint darker wavy lines, which are still more obscure on 

 fore wing. Underside much paler, especially on hind wing ; 

 the lines reddish grey and wavy, the subterminal more 

 distinct. 



San Antonio, W. Colombia, 5800 feet, December 1907 

 (M. G. Palmer), the type <$; also two other $ <$ , December, 

 and one ? , November; all from the same locality. 



The terrnen of fore wing is slightly gibbous between R 3 

 and M 1 , oblique below, and faintly concave above; of hind 

 wing bluntly angled. Allied to A. bifilata, Warr. Nov. Zool. 

 ii. p. 103 (Cambogia ?). Some specimens are slightly darker 

 and more purplish-tinged than the type. 



[To be continued.] 



BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE. 



A Natural History of the British Butterflies, their World-wide 

 Variation and Geographical Distribution. A Text-booh for 

 Students and Collectors. By J. W. Tutt, F.E.S. Vol. III. 8vo. 

 London, 1908-09. Pp. viii, 410; pis. 53. Price £1. 



We have received another instalment of Mr. Tutt's enormously 

 elaborate work on British Lepidoptera, being the tenth of the 

 whole series. The amount of matter it contains is far more than 



