68 



Mr. G. S. Miller on 



Nancoury, Nicobars ; three males and two males (type). 



Pt. Blair, Andamans ; one male and two females. 



Bassein, Burma ; one female. 



There are a good many examples from the Nicobars and 

 Andamans in the B. M., and all that I have seen are perfectly 

 constant in the above-mentioned characters. 



Pareumelea rostrata, nov. 



^ ? . Antennae, body, and wings dark ochreous olive; the 

 apex of fore wings broadly and the outer margins of both 

 wings more narrowly clear ochreous yellow ; the olive colour 

 thickly striated with dark brown, and a band of this colour 

 extends below the apex of fore wings nearly to the outer 

 margin, then the yellow marginal band narrows downwards, 

 but on the hind wings it is fairly uniform in width and is 

 somewhat angled in the middle, as in P. hortensiata, Guen. 

 On the underside the vs^ings are olive-brown without striations, 

 the band as above ; body and legs yellow. 



Expanse of wings 2^^- inches. 



Menado, Celebes ; one pair. 



It lacks the upper discal large yellow spot of Jwrtensiata 

 and the yellow marginal band is of a differeut formation. 



IX. — Two new Mammals from Asia Mino)'. 

 By Gerrit S. Miller. 



The British Museum contains specimens of a shrew and 

 dormouse from Asia Minor, neither of which appears to have 

 been hitherto described. 



Neomys teres, sp. n. 

 1906. Neomys fodiens, Thomas, P. Z. S. 1905, ii. p. 522 (April 1906), 



Type. — Adult male (skin and skull). B.M. no. 5. 10. 4. 17, 

 Collected at edge of brook in mountains (altitude 7000 feet) 

 25 miles north of Erzeroum, Turkey in Asia, July 8, 1905, 

 by R. B. Woosnam. Presented by Col. A. C. Bailward. 

 Original number 53. 



Diagnosis.— ^'\m\\si\: to Neomys anomalus, Cabrera*, and 



* Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 7, xx. p. 214 (September, 1907). Sau 

 Martin de la Vega, Province of Madrid, Spain. 



