OTIORHYNCHIDASA—BVOTINI. 55 
their neighbors by rather more than their own leneth. The whole is of a 
uniform blackish or blackish brown color. 
Length, excluding rostrum, 7-7"; of head and rostrum, 2:3""; of an- 
tennz, 42™"; of elytra, 5°5™"; height of body.3e 
Florissant, Colorado. Seven specimens, Nos. 1653, 5939 and 7635, 
6543, 8157 ?, 11270 and 13033, 11798 and 12048, 13015. 
EVoPES OCCUBATUS. 
Pio Wios he 15: 
Form as in the other species. Head, including rostrum, and prothorax 
finely, similarly, and uniformly beaded (or punctured), the sculpture dis- 
tinct and sharp. Head and rostrum considerably longer than the thorax, 
the latter scarcely or net at all stouter than the fore femora. Prothorax 
higher than long, scarcely arched above, tapering distinctly forward, trun- 
cate at each extremity. Elytra shaped as in FE. veneratus, the strie slender 
and slightly impressed, the punctures delicate, much smaller than in the 
other species, but deeply impressed and in virtue only of their lesser size 
separated by wider intervals; elytra clothed with linear series of hairs, 
apparently arising from the punctures, nearly as long as the interspaces. 
Color as in the other species. 
Timm , -)mmm , 
Length, excluding rostrum, 7"; of head and rostrum, 2"; of elytra, | 
See 
Florissant, Colorado. Four specimens, Nos. 486, 8970, 11772, and in 
the Princeton College collection, No. 1.591?. 
OMILEUS Horn. 
This monotypic genus is known at present only in Texas, and it is 
interesting therefore to find a fossil form at Florissant. 
OMILEUS EVANIDUS. 
Phin, Fieve 
Head and rostrum longer than the prothorax, the surface smooth or 
nearly so, but the rostrum longitudinally sulcate and stout, much stouter 
than the fore femora; scape of antennz barely reaching the middle of the 
