262 Mr. R, I. Pocock on the Genera and 



upwards at an angle of 45°, straight throughout the greater 

 part of its length, but with the slender apex curved down- 

 wards. 



Palj) with its tibia a little longer than the tarsus and pro- 

 tarsus, the latter only lightly curved, scopulate beneath ; 

 tibia of palp just about equal to that of fourth leg, shorter 

 than protarsus of latter : palp shorter than third leg and not 

 two tliirds the length of the fourth leg. 



Legs long and slender. 



BleasKvements in millimetres of type (c?). — Total length 30, 

 length of mandible 7, of palp 24'5, of first leg 22, of second 

 leg 20, of third leg 26, of fourth leg 43, of tibia of palp 8, of 

 its protarsus and tarsus 7*5, of tibia of fourth leg 8, of its 

 protarsus 8'8. 



Loc. Gadzima on the Unifuli (4200 feet), in Mashonaland 

 [G. A. K. Marshall). 



Sol pug a caffra, sp. n. 



Colour. Cephalic plate, mandibles, and limbs a uniform 

 deep olive-green, paler towards the extremities of the legs ; 

 tergal plates of the abdomen coal-black, the rest of this region, 

 as well as the cephalothorax, olive-green ; the pubescence 

 covering the integument silky white and red ; edges of 

 malleoli infuscate. 



Width of cephalic plate much exceeding the length of the 

 tibia or of the protarsus and tarsus of palp and equal to the 

 tibia and nearly half the protarsus of the fourth leg ; ocular 

 tubercle clothed with slender, not spiniform, setre. Tibia of 

 fourth leg exceeding protarsus by about half the length of the 

 first segment of the tarsus. 



Measurements in millimetres. — Total length 52, length of 

 mandible 16; width of head-plate 12-3; length of palp 30, 

 of fourth leg 47, of tibia of palp 93, of its tarsus and pro- 

 tarsus 10; tibia of fourth leg 9"2, protarsus 7-8. 



Loc. Estcourt, in Natal (4000 feet alt.). 



Two adult females obtained by Mr. G. A. K. Marshall, 

 ■who informs me that he saw but failed to capture a third 

 specimen at the junction of the Blue Krantz and Tugela 

 liivers. 



In the uniformly dark infuscate tint of its head, jaws, 

 limbs, and abdomen this species resembles the two species 

 Butleri and nigrescens, which were described in Ann. & Mag. 

 Nat. Hist. (6) xvi. p. 88 (1895). 



