Mr. H. E. Andrewes on Oriental Carabidee. 285 
from Long Xuyen in Cochin-China (Dorr) and Hanoi in 
Tonkin (Demange). In the British Museum are examples 
from Java, China, Ceylon, Rangoon, and Andaman Is. 
(Roepstorff) ; in the Indian Museum from Rangoon ; in the 
Brussels Museum from Sumatra ; and in the Paris Museum 
from Siam (Pavie, type), and Bangkok (Larnaudie), from 
Tonkin (J. Levasseur), and Hanoi (Dr. Wiet, V. Laboissicre, 
and L. Duport). 
Diplochila impressa, F. Suppl. Ent. Syst. 1798, p. 57; Dej. 
Spec. Gen. ii. 1826, p. 383; Laf. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 
1851, p. 279; Redt. Reis. Novar. Zool. 11., Col. 1867, 
p- 10; Bates, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. 1892, p. 326; Andr. 
Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1919, p.90; id. Trans. Ent. Soc. 
Ihond: 1921, pr 159; 
In this species the mentum is small, lobes rounded at 
apex, emargination deep, without set ; ligula smali, a little 
dilated and truncate at apex, separated by a rather wide but 
shallow notch from the paraglosse, which extend some way 
beyond it ; mandibles edentate, but the right one has inside 
a slight protuberance at about middle. 
This well-known Indian species has been recorded by 
Redtenbacher from the Philippine Is. and by Bates from 
Burma. I have seen specimens in the Oxford Museum from 
Singapore, and a solitary example in the Paris Museum 
from Cochin-China (Beaudouin). 
Diplochila colossus, Bates, Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. 1892, p. 826. 
In this species the elytral border behind the shoulder is 
only very faintly crenulate. The lobes of the mentum are 
rather pointed at apex, and there are no setw on the margin 
of the sinus; the ligula is narrow at apex and separated from 
the paraglosse by a very distinct notch; the right mandible 
has a single, the left a double, tooth. 
This is another species described on a unique specimen 
taken by Mr. L. Fea at Palon in Pegu. Bates thought that 
this might be an unusually large example of D. impressa, but 
he was quite right in describing it as distinct, the form of 
the labrum, clypeus, and palpi being very different. Having 
now seen other examples, this time from Indo-China, I can 
supplement his excellent description by adding that there 
are two supraorbital setz, the form of the palpi is the same 
in both sexes; although the scutellary striole is wanting, 
there are on some specimens vestiges of it in the form of one 
or two minute punctures, and the last ventral segment ¢ has 
a single seta on each side, the 2 twosete. Exceptin regard 
