16 FOSSIL INSECTS OF THE BRITISH COAL MEASURES. 



ORTHOPTERA. 



Nomoiieura (Blattseformia, Handl.). 

 (a) Blattoidea. 



Families. Hyaloptilidse, Protoperlidte, Fayoliellidae, Oryctoblattinida?. 

 (6) Mantoidea. 



Families. Stenoneuritidae, Stenoneuridae, Isclmoneuridse. 



Heteroneui'a. (Equivalent in part to Orthoptera Cursovia and Orthopteroidea, Handl.) 

 (a) Phasrnoidea. 



Family. Sthenaropodidse. 



(&) Locustidae. (Equivalent in part to Orthoptera Saltatoria.) 

 Families. (Ediscliiidae, Caloneuridse. 



Lameere restricted his research to the French fossil insects, his studies being 

 based on the types described and figured by Brongniart (1893, ' Bull. Soc. 

 Industrie, Saint Etienne,' 3 ser., vii), the collections made by Fayol, and the 

 large series of fossil insects from the Upper Coal Measures (Stephanian) of 

 Commentry, now preserved in the National Museum of Natural History, Paris. 

 The following remarks may be made on his classification : 



EPHEMKKOPTERA. The three families forming this .division are regarded as 

 closely related, the genus Becqnerelia of the Spilapteridae bearing certain characters 

 of the Megasecopteridas, while the family is also linked through the genus 

 Apopappus (which is taken to supply a natural transition between the Spilapteridse) 

 to the genus Triplosoba. 



ODONATOPTUKA. The family Fouqueidae is held to differ from the Spilapteridae 

 in that transverse veins are numerous, close together, and form a network over 

 the inner margin, and in the anal area a feature which brings it nearer to the 

 Protodonata. The family DictyoneuridaB possesses a network of veins extending 

 over the whole wing, as in Microdictya. The remaining family, Dictyoptilidae, 

 contains Archdemegaptilus, which Lameere considers differs only from the Dictyo- 

 neuridae in the fusion of the median and radial veins at the base of the wing. 

 P rota gr ion is considered nearest to the true Odonata, while Meganeura and Gilsonia 

 are specialised types. 



RHYNCHOTA. The presence of a rostrum in Lycocercus goldenbergi, and the 

 resemblance of the head and leg of Homoioptera gigantea to the same structures in 

 Eugereon, are considered sufficient proof of the Protohemipteroid characters of 

 Lycercus, Homoioptera, and the allied genera Lithoptilus, Megaptllus, Mecynostoma, 

 Arcltaeoptilus and Paramegaptilus. 



ORTHOPTERA. Lameere regards Handlirsch's group of Protorthoptera as an 

 assemblage of two related but distinct types, which he classifies under Nomoneura 

 and Heteroneura. The genus Stenoneurites is regarded as the connecting link 

 between the Mantoidea and the ancestors of the Blattoidea, the genus Stenoneura 

 being also in some, measure transitional between Stenoneurites and the Ischno- 

 neuridae. 



