•150 Mr. G. T. Betliune- Baker on ?ieio 



5 from the middle, 6 from the upper angle, 7, 8, and 9 

 stalked from nearer the apex, 10 absent. Secondaries with 

 4 from the lower angle, 5 from above the middle, 6 and 7 

 stalked. 



Type, Paramarane pnlchra, B-B. 



Paramarane pulchra, sp. n. 



$ . Head and thorax sooty black ; abdomen ochreous 

 yellow. Legs sooty black. Primaries silvery white, costa 

 very finely yellow, fringes finely tipped with pale yellow, an 

 oblique waved yellow postmedian stripe with a dark brown 

 central finer line. Secondaries uniform golden-yellow. 



Underside : both wings uniform golden yellow. 



Expanse 51 mm. 



Hab. Warmasin Lakes (Arfak Mountains), 6000 feet, 

 Dutch New Guinea ; February. 



Type in Coll. Kenrick. 



Rarisquamosa, gen. nov. 



Antennas with bristles and cilia. Wings : primaries broad, 

 expanding rapidly outwards ; secondaries of moderate width. 

 Neuration : cell of moderate length ; primaries with 4 from 

 the lower angle, 5 from above the middle of the cell which is 

 deeply recessed, 6, 7, 8, and 9 stalked, 10 absent, 11 from 

 the cell. Secondaries: 4 from the angle, 5 from above the 

 middle of the cell which is very deeply recessed, 6 and 7 

 stalked, 8 anastomosing shortly with 7 near the base of the 

 cell. The primaries are but scantily clothed with scales and 

 consideiable areas are covered with fine bifurcate hair-like 

 scales, often curled, which give the wings a semitransparent 

 appearance. 



Type, Earisquamosa arfaki, B-B. 



Bar i squamosa arfaki, sp. n. 



$ . Head, antennae, thorax, and abdomen dull rufous; legs 

 same colour. Both wings rufous. Primaries with the 

 median area broadly covered with fine grey bifurcate hair-like 

 scales, a broadish rufous line across the end of the cell, an 

 irregular terminal area of similar grey scales, the postmedian 

 area between these grey areas clear rufous. Secondaries 

 without any markings at all, but more scantily scaled at the 

 base. 



Expanse 49 mm. 



Bab. Ninay Valley, Arfak Mountains, Dutch New Guinea, 

 3600 feet. 



Type in my collection. 



