74 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. | [Feb., ’08 
Habitat.—Alaska ; Rocky Mountains; British America ; 
Lacombe, Alberta, Canada. 
5. Vidleri Elwes. 
Wings above blackish brown; on primaries a yellow-brown band en- 
closing three small, dark-brown ocelli, the upper two pupiled with white. 
On secondaries a band extending about half-way across the wing, con- 
taining two brown spots, the upper small. 
Habitat.—Seton Lake, near Lilloet, on the Fraser River, 
British Columbia. 
6. tyndarus, var. callais Edw.. 
o'—Wings above brownish, with a broad, transverse, castaneous band 
on outer two-thirds of primaries, more or less distinct. At apical end is 
contained a black, duplex, bipupiled spot. Secondaries with a series of 
three small, black points, each ina castaneous ring; fringes brown. 
Primaries beneath castaneous except costal edge and apex, which are 
gray; markings as above. Secondaries grayish, with brownish scales; 
disk crossed by a deeply crenated line, anterior to which, near base, is 
another line nearly obsolete; spots as above. Body brown above, below 
dark gray; antennae brown, luteous below; club fuscous above, yellow 
at tip. 
Q—Paler, the spots on secondaries sometimes more or less wanting. 
Exp. 1.50 inches. 
Habitat.—Colorado; New Mexico. 
7. epipsodea Butl. 
o'—Upper surface of wings dark brown; generally three black, ocel- 
lated spots on primaries, broadly surrounded with reddish brown, wid- 
ening anteriorly and narrowing in the submedian interspaces. A similar 
series on secondaries, three or four in number, surrounded with reddish 
brown. Primaries beneath as above, third ocellus obsolete or repre- 
sented by a point. Secondaries beneath with outer margin paler and 
a curved median, blackish band; spots repeated, but reduced. Body 
and palpi brownish black; antennae and club brown above, buff below, 
fulvous at tip. Exp. 1.50 inches. 
Q—Of same size; ocelli enlarged. 
Var. brucei Elwes, 
The fulvous patch on primaries divided into four parts by the subcostal 
and discoidal nervures. Above third median nervure a small, fulvous 
patch which contains two black dots, the white pupils obsolete. Beneath 
as above. I regard this as a local aberration. 
Flabitat.—New Mexico to Alaska at suitable elevations ; 
common in Montana, Eastern Washington, and British Co- 
lumbia. 
