14 TERTIARY RHYNCHOPHOROUS COLEOPTERA. 
almost straight, stout, striate throughout; antennz inserted at the middle 
of the beak, which they nearly equal in length, the club composed of three 
joints, fusiform-ovate, three times as long as broad and more than twice as 
broad as the joints of the stalk, which are elongate and hardly enlarged 
apically. Prothorax a little longer than the height of the head, scarcely 
rounded above longitudinally, coarsely and sparsely punctured. Elytra 
evidently broader than the thorax, but not greatly, very convex, deeply 
and coarsely striate. 
Length, excluding beak, 3°35"; beak, 1:1™"; antenne, 0:9™™. 
Florissant, Colorado. One specimen, No. 12051. 
Named in memory of my former instructor and respected friend, the 
distinguished anatomist and paleontologist, Jeffries Wyman. 
EUGNAMPTUS Schonherr. 
Excepting a single Indian species of peculiar appearance, all the mem- 
bers of this slender type of Rhynchitidze come from North America, where 
we have 5 species, mostly occurring in the southern and western states. 
They have been found fossil only in this country, at Green River, Wyo- 
ming, where we have two species (neither of them referred here with any 
great confidence). 
Table of the species of Eugnamptus. 
Elytra without punctures in the strie -.......-......:-1-..---+--.2---- grandevus. 
Blytra with puncturesin the stris--222- 5-45-24. ee ee eee decemsatus. 
EUGNAMPTUS GRANDAVUS. 
PL. wv, Fig. 9. 
Sitones grandevus Seudd., Bull. U. 8S. Geol. Geog. Surv. Terr., 11, 83-84 (1876). 
Bugnamptus grandevus Seudd., Tert. Ins. N, A., 481-482, Pl. viii, Fig. 20 (1890). 
Although no additional specimens of this species have been found since 
those described in my Tertiary Insects, the original description and figure 
were of so inferior a specimen that I have here added a figure of one of the 
two additional specimens described subsequently. 
Green River, Wyoming, F. C. A. Richardson, L. A. Lee, A. 8S. Packard. 
