ol 
The deep and elongate fovea into which the prothoracic strie 
are dilated immediately behind the middle will distinguish this 
species, I think, from all its described Australian congeners. The 
wide blackish fascia occupying nearly all the apical half of the 
elytra furnishes another conspicuous character. 
Victoria ; taken by Mr French in the Dandenong Ranges. 
CRYPTAMORPHA. 
C. Macleayi, sp. nov. Minus elongata; sparsim longe pubescens; 
obscure brunneo-testacea, elyris circascutellum et transversim 
pone medium plus minusve distincte infuscatis ; capite sat 
opaco sparsim sat fortiter (nullo modo rugulose) punctulato, 
sulcis frontalibus subtilibus a lateribus longe remotis ; pro- 
thorace leviter transverso crebre fere rugulose punctulato, 
lateribus subrotundatis vix crenulatis; elytris sat fortiter 
punctulato-striatis, interstitiis subtiliter seriatim punctulatis. 
Long., Laie iat., 2 1 
The most striking characters of this species appear to be the 
opacity of its head, the extreme fineness of the frontal sulci 
(especially the inner one), and the unusual width of the space 
that separates the inner sulci from the eye. I have named it 
after the late Hon. Sir W. Macleay. 
N.S. Wales; Blue Mountains; not rare among dead leaves of 
Lucalyptus. 
MYRABOLIA. 
M. Lindensis, sp. nov. Testacea; subnitida; oblonga; sub- 
tiliter fulvo-pubescens ; vix depressa ; capite prothoraceque 
crebre subtilissime punctulatis; hoc subquadrato, leviter 
transverso, subtiliter reflexo-marginato, equaliter leviter 
convexo, lateribus subparallelis, angulis posticis subacutis ; 
elytris subtiliter punctulato-striatis, interstitiis subtilissime 
punctulatis et (precipue marginem versus) subtiliter cari- 
natis; corpore subtus confertim subtiliter punctulato. 
Long., 13, 1.; lat., 2 1. (vix). 
The prothorax resembles in outline that of MW. Haroldiana, 
Reitt., but is a little narrower, and has the hind angles quite 
sharply defined ; it is considerably more finely punctured, and 
has no trace of an impression near the front. It differs also 
from M. Grouvelliana, Reitt. (of which M. Grouvelle has very 
kindly given me a type), by the much straighter sides of its pro- 
thorax, the much sharper hind angles and finer puncturation of 
the same and the closer puncturation of its metasternum. 
The very fine slightly raised lines running down the elytra are 
not peculiar to this species, as I find them distinctly traceable 
its two described congeners. 
8. Australia ; under bark of Zucalyptus near Port Lincoln. 
