ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 
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PHILADELPHIA, Pa., JANUARY, 1908. 
We have selected a fossil species as the most remarkable in- 
sect made known during the preceding year. Halter ameri- 
cana was described by Prof. T. D. A. Cockerell in Science, N. 
S., vol. XXVI, No. 666, p. 446, October 4, 1907. We quote 
from the original article as follows: A wonderfully preserved 
example with wings spread, from the Miocene shales of Floris- 
sant, Colorado. The anterior wings are clear hyaline, with 
venation as usual in the genus; hind wings as in all the Ne- 
mopteridae, to which family it belongs. The Nemopteridae 
are to-day confined to the Old World, except a single species 
found in Chile. This species belongs to the section of the 
genus containing the Persian Halter extensa Oliv. 
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