On some Reptilian Lower Jaws. 573 



(128 a) * Glyphodes bocchorialis, sp. n, 



cJ . Ochreous white ; palpi with the second joint above 

 and at extremity black ; vertex of head and thorax mixed 

 with black ; fore tibiae banded with black ; abdomen with 

 obscure blackish bands. Fore wing with almost basal, sub- 

 basal, and antemedial fulvous yellow bauds with sinuous 

 black edges ; a large fulvous yellow discoidal ocellus with 

 black centre and black edges extending to costa ; a black- 

 edged fulvous yellow band, slightly excurved from vein 6 to 

 below 2, then retracted to discoidal ocellus and bent out- 

 wards again to inner margin, connected with the antemedial 

 band at vein 1 and with its own sinus, a white line on its 

 outer edge from costa to vein 6 and some white spots be- 

 tween vein 5 and inner margin ; the terminal area black ; a 

 subterminal series of irregular white spots conjoined towards 

 apex ; cilia black, yellow above and below middle. Hind 

 wing with black-edged fulvous yellow discoidal spot con- 

 nected by a black line with the inner margin towards which it 

 forks ; the terminal area black with irregular inner edge, a 

 yellow spot on it between veins 3 and 5 and a subterminal 

 series of irregular white marks, double towards apex; cilia 

 yellow with a black line near base, black at apex^ middle, 

 and tornus. 



Hah. Straits Settlements, Padang Rengas. Exp. 

 16 mm. Type in Coll. Rothschild. 



[To be continued.] 



LXYII. — On some Reptilian Lower Jaws. 

 By D. M. S. Watson, M.Sc 



The object of this paper is to describe the lower jaws of 

 some fossil reptiles and amphibians of Permian and Triassic 

 age from South Africa, and to discuss briefly the bearing of 

 their structure on some morphological questions. 



Deinocep/ialia, 



The structure of the Deinocephalian lower jaw has been 

 briefly described by Seeley (1896) and Broom (1910, 1911), 

 but is not completely known. No known specimen shows 

 the splenial or coronoid. 



The outer aspect is very like that of Dlmetrodon , and the 

 Ann. S Mag. N. Hist. Ser. 8. Vol. x. 39 





