390 R. I. POCOCK 



ocelli arranged in two or three contiguous series. Antennae with 

 2.°*^, 3/*^' and 4.*^ segments subequal in length , the h}^ much 

 the longest and thickest, the 6.*'^ and 7.^^^ taken together, conical 

 and a little longer than the 4.^'^ First tergite furnished with 

 two rows of long keels, the anterior row consisting of 10 keels 

 extending from the front border throughout two thirds of the 

 length of the segment, the posterior row', consisting of 9 irre- 

 gular shaped keels which are about half as long as those of 

 the anterior series and are divided into an anterior and poste- 

 rior half extends from the lateral border along the posterior 

 border, its keels not meeting but anteriorly intercalating with 

 the posterior end of those in front ; the lateral border of this 

 tergite on a level with the inferior tubercles of the rest. The rest 

 of the somites very similar in form; each provided with 9 keels, 

 which extend at equal distances from the middle line of the 

 back below the middle of the side but not nearly to the base of the 

 legs ; each keel divided into two complete halves so as to form 

 two tubercles, the pore-bearing tubercle much the largest of the 

 series; towards the hinder end of the body the tubercles become 

 more dentiform ; the areas between the keels, as also the an- 

 terior cylindrical part of the somites studded with irregular 

 shaped punctures; the anal tergite with its edge produced and 

 evenly convex and a transverse rovv- of four tubercles on its up- 

 per surface. Legs hairy beneath with the trochanter as long as 

 the femur , claw very long. 



Number of somites up to 68. 



Length up to 34 mm. 



Locality, Palon in Pegu. Obtained by Sig. L. Fea. 



4. Caiiilbala jfeae, sp. n. 



Closely allied to the preceding. Smaller than C. doriae and 

 paler coloured being a uniform brownish tint throughout. Eyes 

 without pigment, consisting of about two ocelli situated close 

 up to the edge of first tergite. First tergite strongly carinate 

 as in C. doriae, the two external carinae extendino; across the 



