532 Bibliographical Notice. 



ocliraceous ; anterior wings with two contiguous fuscous spots 

 at centre of cell, a fuscous cliscocellular spot at end of cell, 

 and five spots of the same colour in a curved submarginal 

 series ; posterior wings with two large black spots near costal 

 margin, the outermost with a small fuscous spot beneath it, 

 a small fuscous spot in cell, and a discocellular streak of the 

 same colour at end of cell, and with the following blackish 

 spots : — one beneath and near base of cell, two near abdo- 

 minal margin, one near anal angle, and four in a curved series 

 beyond cell, and with a double series of pale fuscous, linear, 

 submarginal spots ; fringe of both wings fuscous. Body and 

 legs more or less concolorous with wings. 



Exp. wings 20 millim. 



Hah. Malacca {coll. Staudinger). 



Polyommatus hagus, n. sp. 



Female. Wings above closely resembling those of the same 

 sex of P. hoiticus. Wings beneath pale brownish ocliraceous, 

 with the following linear brownish fascias margined with 

 greyish : — both wings with two at end of cells and two sub- 

 marginal fascia3, the innermost broadest ; posterior wings 

 with two large, marginal, blackish spots, containing a few 

 scattered greenish scales and inwardly margined with pale 

 reddish ochraceous, separated by the lower median nervule. 

 Body above more or less concolorous with wings, beneath with 

 legs greyish white ; legs more or less streaked with brownish. 



Exp. wings, ? 30 millim. 



Hah. Province Wellesley [Birchj coll. Distant). 



BIBLIOGEAPHICAL NOTICE. 



Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India, Palceontoloyia Indiea, 



being Figures and Deticriptions of the Organic liemains procured 



during the Progress of the Geological Survey of India. Ser. iv. 



Indian Pretertiary Vertehrafa. Vol. I. Part 6. The Beptilia 



and Amphibia of the Maieri and Deniva Groups. By K. Lydekkee, 



B.A., F.Gr.S., &c. "W ith 6 plates. Calcutta : Geological Survey 



Office. London : Trubner & Co. 1885. 



Eeptiliak fossils have been obtained from the Maleri rocks of India 



in two localities, Maleri (about thirty miles north of the Godaveri, 



in the central provinces) and in the coal-field of South Eewah. The 



with the costal nervure. The typical specimen, however, is not ouly 

 unique, but also not my own property, thus preventing that detailed 

 structural examination which is necessary for exact generic determinaticm, 

 but which is liable at the same time to injure the specimen. 



