1883.] MR. F. MOORE ON NEW ASTATIC LEPIDOPTERA. 521 



yet remains to ba done before we shall have arrived at an accurate 

 knowledge of the entire anatomy of this animal. 



Postscript. Since the foregoing pages were written, Dr. R. J. 

 Anderson ^ has pubhshed in the ' Journal of Anatomy' a short account 

 of the anatomy of an additional specimen of the Indian Elephant. 



In tins paper the author mentions the presence of a uterus, vagina, 

 and genito-urinary passage, but communicates no particulars regarding 

 the structure of these different parts of the female organs. Hence 

 our knowledge of these organs and of the variations which they 

 present in different specimens of the Indian Elephant remains in the 

 same unsatisfactory state as before. 



4. Descriptions of uew Asiatic Diurnal Lepidoptera. 

 By F. Moore, F.Z.S., &c. 



[Eeceived September 12, 1883.] 

 (Plates XLVIII. & XLIX.) 



Subfamily Satyrin^. 



Callerebia modesta, n. sp. 



Male. Smaller than C. nirmala. Upperside similarly marked with 



smaller ocelli. Underside uniformly brown throughout both wings, 



the ocelli less distinctly bordered ; hind wing with a well-formed 



. small ocellus between the radial and upper median vein, in addition 



to that near anal angle. 



Ex}»anse Ij^ inch. 



Hub. Gurhwal, N.W. Himalaya {Capt. Beckett). In coll. F. 

 Moore. 



Subfamily Nymphalin^. 



Enispe tessellata, n. sp. 



Male and Female. Allied to E. eutfiymius '. fore wing with broader 

 marginal and submarginal bauds, which are also confluent at their 

 angles, the discal macular band composed of larger and confluent 

 spots ; there is also an inner band which runs into the upjjcr discal 

 streak, but which is less apparent on the hind wing; the discocellular 

 lunular spot is also larger, the veins in crossing the disk are also 

 black-lined : hind wing with three similar outer confluent bands, the 

 Uuear inner band indistinct in the male ; veins across the disk black- 

 lined. 



Expanse, (S 85, 5 3| inches. 



Hab. Darjiling (Grofe), Nepal (Ramsai/). In coll. F. Moore. 



Fam. LYCiENiD^. 

 Gerydus drumila. 



Miletus drumila, Moore, P. Z. S. 1865, p. 777, pi. 41. fie. 12, 9 . 

 Male. Upperside dark umber-brown : fore wing with a pale medial 

 longitudinal fascia curving from lower end of the cell across the disk. 

 ' 'Journal of Anatomy and Physiology,' vol. xvii. p. 491. 



