10 Mr. R. I. Pocock on some new 



four to five times as long as wide; the patella and tibia sub- 

 equal and nearly as long as the femur ; tarsus short, truncate ; 

 org-an as in tig. (PI. 11. fig. 4 a). 



Legs of first and second pairs very long and slender, with 

 tarsi scopulate and tibia and protarsi spined beneath ; tarsi 

 with one or two spines only; claws with a single basally 

 curved row of eight to ten teeth ; third leg with a few short 

 spines on the anterior side of the patella and of the tibia at 

 its distal end ; protarsus spined beneath ; tarsus scopulate, 

 claw with only two or three strong teeth at the base ; fourth 

 leg with patella armed with short spines in front, a few also 

 on the tibia ; long spines beneath the distal end of the pro- 

 tarsus and many spines on the tarsus, which is not scopulate 

 and has the claws armed basally with a few large teeth and 

 distally with some small denticles. 



Aleasiirements in millimetres. — Total length 10 ; carapace 5 ; 

 length of palpus 19, of first leg 19, of second 15, of third 12'5, 

 of fourth 19. 



Loc. Graaf Reinet {Miss Lejypan). 



Apart from the greater length of its palpi and legs and less 

 coarse sculpturing of carapace, the male of this species may 

 be distinguished from that of 8. insculptus, Poc, from King 

 William's Town (Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (7) vii. p. 285), 

 by the following amongst other particulars : — 



a. Lateral eyes on each side separated by a space wliicli 

 equals about the long diameter of the anterior and 

 twice the long diameter of the posterior ; posterior 

 medians less than their diameter from posterior 

 laterals and barely more than that from anterior 

 laterals insculptus, Poc. 



h. Lateral eyes on each side separated by a space which 

 is much greater than the long diameter of the ante- 

 rior and about four times that of the posterior ; 

 posterior medians at least twice their diameter 

 from the laterals and about four times that from 

 the anterior medians palpiger, sp. n. 



Stasimopus artifex^ sp. n. 



In disposition of eyes closely resembling S. oculatus, Poc, 

 from Bloemfontein (P. Z. S. 1897, p. 728), as also in the 

 presence of spines on the apex of the protarsus of the third 

 leg beneath and the presence of nearly a dozen spines, the 

 anterior of which are irregularly arranged, upon the apex of 

 the infero-posterior side of the protarsus of the fourth leg ,• but 

 differing in that the spines on the protarsus are only about 

 six instead of about fifteen in number, and weak instead of 



