Chilopoda of the Australian Continent. 453 
6', Tarsi of anterior legs undivided, of fourteenth and 
fifteenth pairs bisegmented, z. e. with tarsal and pro- 
LATRA SCOTMENTS) Vr acigh ds achat nels shake eketaea elke Lamycetes *. 
b. A cluster of ocelli on each side of the head; no stig- 
mata on the first leg-bearing somite ...........0204. Inthobius. 
Genus HENICcops. 
Henicops maculatus, Newport. 
Henicops maculatus, Newport, op. cit. p. 872, pl. xxxiii. fig. 27, and 
pl. xl. fig. 3. 
?. Colour yellowish brown, with an indistinct median 
dorsal dark stripe. 
Antenne long, composed of 37 segments. 
Coxe of toxicognath with precoxal processes broad, convex, 
and armed with 3+3 teeth. 
The posterior terga sparsely bristly; the anterior with 
rounded angles and scarcely emarginate posterior borders; 
the posterior borders becoming gradually more and more 
emarginate from before backwards, those of the minor tergites 
more deeply so than of the major, the emargination perfectly 
evenly convex. 
Legs long, hairy, and beset with short spinules; the tarsi 
with 2+2 spinules beneath, set at the distal end of the sub- 
segments. Coxal pores small, 4,5, 5,5; gonopods of female 
with 2 short spurs and a simple claw. 
Total length 15 millim. ; length of antenne 8, of posterior 
ley 9. 
Peek, Tasmania; also Australia and New Zealand. 
The above-given description is taken from a specimen 
from Wellington, New Zealand (H.ALS. ‘ Challenger’), which 
is apparently conspecific with the type originally recorded 
from Tasmania. The British Museum also has damaged 
specimens of apparently the same species from ‘Tasmania and 
from Fern Tree Gully, Wood’s Point Road, and Loch in 
Gippsland, Victoria, presented by Prof. Baldwin Spencer, 
F.R.S. Some of these specimens are mottled with black 
spots, two of them have 44 antennal segments, and one of 
them 4-5 coxal teeth; but the material is not sufficient to 
justify the separation of the Australian from the ‘’asmanian 
or New Zealand type. 
Henicops impressus, Hutton (Tr. N. Z. Inst. x. p. 288, 
* Lamyctes is represented in New Zealand by L. emarginatus, New- 
port. The genus will probably turn up in Australia, seeing that it 
occurs both inS. Africa, 8. America, Sumatra, &c., and Europe, as well 
as in New Zealand. 
