92 Mr. H. T. Stainton on 



Head greyish, with some brown hairs intermixed; face brown- 

 ish ; antennae dark grey, with paler annulations ; palpi white, 

 with a faint appearance of a dark spot on the under side of the 

 terminal joint ; thorax black, with a few whitish scales ; legs dark 

 grey ; the four anterior tarsi white, with the ends of the joints 

 dark grey ; the posterior tarsi dirty ochreous. 



Anterior wings five times as long as broad, very dark grey or 

 black, not irrorated with whitish, as in the allied species, the 

 white marks are few in number, and from the contrast of colour, 

 stand out very prominently ; on the inner margin, towards the 

 base, are a few white scales ; about the middle of the inner margin 

 is an oblong white spot, and a little beyond the middle of the 

 inner margin is another smaller white spot, followed by a few 

 white scales at the anal angle ; along the costa are several short 

 white streaks, of which the four nearest the apex are the most 

 distinct, the fourth from the apex is connected by white scales 

 with the second inner-marginal spot, thus forming, as it were, a 

 white fascia ; the apical streak is continued round the black 

 ocellated spot to the hinder margin ; cilia at the apex whitish, 

 surrounded by a black curved line ; cilia at the anal angle dark 

 grey- 



Posterior wings five times as long as broad, grey with paler 

 cilia. 



This species was discovered by Mr. R. F. Logan (after whom 

 I have named it) ; he took a single specimen off a hazel bush near 

 Luss, in Dumbartonshire, on the evening of the 5th of July, 1847; 

 this remained unique till this year, when a second specimen was 

 taken by Mr. Jobson, at Kilmun, about the middle of June. 



This species appears to form a connecting link between this 

 group and Guttea. 



Sp. 6. Anglicella, n. sp. 



Alis anticis cinereis, dorso albido farinato, costa albido-strigu- 

 lata, ciliis externe bis fusco-cinctis ; palpis albis, articulo 

 tertio annulo lato fusco. 



Nebulea, Haw. ? 



Meleagripennella, St. ? 



Distinguished from Meleagripennella by the much darker 

 anterior wings, and from Torquillella and Scoticella by the broad 

 black ring on the terminal joint of the palpi. 



