’ IOI 
THE ‘HARVESTMEN AND PSEUDOSCORPIONS 
OF YORKSHIRE. 
WM. FALCONER, 
Slaithwaite, Huddersfield. 

(Continued from page 158). 
SuB.-ORDER : PANCTENODACTYLI, Balz. 
Fam.: . CHELIFERIDZ. 
Group If. Eyes, 2: 
Gen. CHIRIDIUM Menge. 
(C. MUSEORUM Leach. 
The smallest British pseudoscorpion, generally distributed 
and abundant in Great Britain, only noticed at Dundrum 
in Ireland. Occurs in a great variety of situations, in 
old houses, stables, barns, haylofts, etc., behind boards, 
among debris, under stones on the floor, in crevices of 
woodwork ; beneath the bark of trees, and in nests of 
birds in walls and hollow trees. 
1st Record: T. Petch, Aldborough. The Naturalist, 1903, 
p. 460. 
V.C. 61.—Thorp Garth, Aldborough, ina glass of water, T.P. 
V.C. 63.—Almondbury, Huddersfield, a dozen examples 
under pieces of wood lying on the floor and in the 
neglected cupboards of a tradesman’s cellars (The 
Naturalist, March, 1908) ; in the store room of the same 
building during alterations, an equal number, September, 
1909, without special search being made for them. 
Gen. CHELIFER Geoff. 
(©. LATREILLEI Leach. 
In this country always found near the sea, hiding beneath 
pieces of wood on the sand, or in old sheathing bases of 
marram grass, etc. It has been observed on the shores 
of the Firth of Forth, and at several places in the East 
and South of England, and is usually plentiful. 
1st Record: H. E. Johnson, Spurn, ‘ Trans. Hull Sci. and 
F. Nat. Club’, gor, Vol. I., p. 228. 
V.C. 61.—Spurn, under a log of wood on the sands, H.E. J. ; 
since observed in abundance by other naturalists, 
TS. 30 Ages Wer 
1916 June 1. j 
