Mr. IT. C. Fulton on Steiiopyli.s. 103 



vein to tlic small cross-vein, including a large liyalinc spot 

 in tiie submarginal and in the first basal coll; a brown patcli 

 at ends of second and third veins, including two hyaline 

 spots, one after the other, in the apical part of the submar- 

 ginal cell ; the hind cross-vein is besides margined with 

 fuscous; small cross-vein with a broad brovvn bord^n- ; there 

 is also a brown shade outwards of basal and anal cross-vein. 



Note. 



Trypela [Acinia) ferrnginea, Walker {' Insocta Saundersi- 

 ana,' iv. 1(?53, p. o87), described from the East Indies, 

 belongs to the Pyrgotinte, according to a notice sent me by 

 Dr. Speiser, wlio has seen the type at the British Museum. 

 Tiie wing-pattern is very different from that of any other 

 at |)resent known Indian species, and apj)roacIies that of the 

 Ethiopian Tephritopyrgotje or the Australian Epicerelke. 



XXIII. — On Stenopylis, a proposed neio Genus of 

 Endodontidse. By Hugh C. Fulton. 



This new genus is proposed for three closely allied species 

 which have been refen-ed to several genera; the compara- 

 tivtdy large Brazieria, Ancey, has a similar-shaped peristome, 

 anil the many-whorled Microphyura, Ancey, is somewhat 

 similar in form, but neither has the internal processes of 

 tStencpylis. 



Stenopylis, gen. nov. 



Shell minute, planorboid ; umbilicus broad ; whorls 3i, 

 apparently smooth, but with microscopic spiral incised lines 

 on tlie luiderside of shell; aperture constricted; peristome 

 continuous, thickened, and almost free, bent inwards near the 

 middle of the columellar margin ; parietal wall with twonjnral 

 lamina'. 



Type, S. kemiclausa, Tate. 



No. 1. Stenopylis hemiclausa^ Tate, Central Australia. 



1894. Planispira hemiclausa, Tate, Trans. Koy. Soc. S. Aust. vol. xviii. 



p. 192. 

 1896. Microphyura hemiclausa, Tate, Horn Exped. (Mollusca) p. 185, 



pi xvii. fig. 1. 



11^ 



