222 ./. //. Emerton, 



distinguished from parts of the palpal organ. In P. arcuata this 

 appendage is as long as the palpal organ and nearly as wide. In 

 C. brevis it is narrow but longer than the rest of the tibia. This 

 appendage was not noticed in my description of Teg. brevis but is 

 correctly described by Banks under C. creber in the Spiders of 

 Ithica. In C. pallida, although it is larger than brevis, the palpal 

 organ is smaller, and the appendage of the tibia reaches only to 

 its base. 



Cicurina arcuata, Keys. Zool. bot. ges. Wien, 1887. 

 Cicurina coinplicata, Em. Trans. Conn. Acad., 1890. 



In New England Agalenidaa &c. Trans. Conn. Acad., 1890, PI. VII, 

 fig;. 2 a is the epigynum of this species, not of Coelotes lougitarsus. 



Cicurina pallida, Keys. Zool. Botan. Ges. Wien, 1887. (Plate VIII, 

 figures 7 to 7 c.) 



5 mm. long and pale and without markings. The cephalothorax 

 is 2.5 mm. in length and 1.5 mm. wide, the head only a little narrower 

 in the male than in the female. The epigynum is smaller than that 

 of C. brevis and the parts seen through the skin rounder. The tarsi 

 of the male palpus are as long as those of brevis, but more pointed 

 and the palpal organ is smaller and more simple, though resembling 

 in its general structure that of brevis. The process of the tibia 

 which is so long and conspicuous im complicata and in brevis, is in 

 pallida but little longer than the rest of the tibia, PI. VIII, fig. 7. 



Found under leaves at Sharon and Northfield, Mass., in company 

 with brevis and complicata. 



Cryphoeca montana, new. (Plate VIII, figures 4 to 4i.) 

 Cryphoeca peckhamii, Simon, from Washington territory, resembles 

 this species. 

 Males 4 mm. long, females 3 mm. General appearance like a 

 small Coelotes or Amaurobius. The cephalothorax is narrowed in 

 front of the first legs and at that point is as high as wide, curving 

 downward toward the eyes. The eyes cover half the width of the 

 front of the head, both rows arched upward. The upper row is 

 largest, the e}'es of equal size, and equal distances apart. In the 

 lower row the middle eyes are half the size of the lateral. The 

 lateral eyes of both rows touch each other. The sternum extends 

 in a long blunt point between the coxae of the fourth legs. The 

 legs are of moderate length, the fourth longest in females, and the 

 first in males. The first and second legs have two spines on the 



