275 



Wectrurus scabricauda, Theob. Cat. p. 136. 



Teretrurus sanguineus, Beddome, A. M. N. H. (5) xvii, 1886, p. 28. 



Teretrurus travancoricus, JBeddome, 1. c. p. 29. 



Snout obtuse ; rostral small, just visible from above ; frontal 

 longer than broad ; supraocular not or scarcely larger than the 

 eye, as long as the prsef rentals or shorter; temporal about 

 half the length of the parietals. Diameter of body 22 to 28 times 

 in the total length. 15 scales round the middle of the body, 17 

 behind the head. Ventrals nearly twice as broad as the contiguous 

 scales, 120-150 ; subcaudals 5-9. Caudal scales smooth or faintly 

 keeled in the female ; all the caudals and the last ventrals more or 

 less distinctly pluricariuate in the males ; tail ending in a simple, 

 compressed point. Brown or purplish red above ; belly red, uni- 

 form or more or less blotched with black. 



Total length 9 inches. 



Hub. Wynaad, Anaimalais, Travancore, 3000-4700 feet. 



Family VI. XENOPELTID.E. 



Cranial bones solidly united ; transpalatine present ; pterygoid 

 extending to quadrate; supratemporal present, suspending quadrate; 

 prasfroutals forming a suture with nasals. Mandible without 

 corouoid bone. Teeth in jaws, palate, and praernaxillary. 



A single genus. 



Fig. 84. Upper view of skull of Xenupeltis unicoloi 



ung. Angular. 

 nr. Articular. 

 bo. Basioccipital. 



d. Dentary. 

 eo. Exoccipital. 



/. Frontal. 



m. Maxillarv. 



. Nasal. 



p. Parietal. 

 pin. Proemaxilhi 

 prf. Prsefrontal. 

 pro. Prootic. 



q. Quadrate. 

 yo. Supraoccipital. 

 sf. Supratemporal 

 tp. Transpalatine. 



