Chilopoda of the Austrahan Continent. AD7 
antenne short, not reaching beyond the second tergite, with 
17 segments. Anal tergum without trace of median groove, 
more convex than in C. aurantiipes; anal legs very short 
and thick, the femur with a much stronger basal notch than 
in CO, aurantiipes, only about one fourth longer than wide, 
its width equa] to the length of the third segment, typically 
armed with 2, 1, 2, 2 spines. 
?. Anal legs much thinner; femur armed with 2, 2, 2, 2 
or 3 spines, at least twice as long as wide, and much narrower 
than the length of the third segment. 
Total length 55 millim.; anal leg 95; antenne 8:5; 
length of head 4. 
Loc. Perth (HW. W. J. Turner). 
In most respects this species resembles C. disténguendus of 
Iaase, but the latter is said to have no spines beneath the 
claw on the anal leg. The only known specimen was from 
Adelaide (Abh. Mus. Dresden, no. 5, p. 61, pl. iv. fig. 61, 1887). 
Cormocephalus Westwoodii, Newp. 
Cormocephalus Westwoodit, Newport, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. xiii. 
p- 100 (1844); id. Tr. Linn. Soc. xix. p, 422 (1845); Kohlrausch, 
Arch. Nat. xlvii. p. 85 (1881) ; Haase, Abh. Mus. Dresden, no. 5, p. 62 
1887). 
Fee EN pbuihus Newport, Tr. Linn. Soc. xix. p. 421 (1844). 
Cormocephalus pallipes, Newport, loc. cit. p. 424. 
Cormocephalus monilicornis, Porat, Bih. Sv. Vet.-Akad. Handl. iv. 
no. vii. p. 16 (1876) (sec. Haase). 
Cormocephalus rugulosus, id. ibid. (sec. Haase). 
Cormocephalus lanatipes, Kohl. Arch. f. Naturg. xlvii. p. 85 (1881) 
(sec. Haase). 
This species is apparently confined more to the eastern parts 
of Australia than C. aurantiipes. The type of C. Westwoodi 
is ticketed merely “ Australia” ; other specimens named by 
Newport were from near Sydney; the types of fecundus from 
Parramatta, and of pallipes from Van Diemen’s Land. The 
type of rugulosus of Porat was also from Sydney. According 
to Haase the form he identified as fecundus has been obtained 
at Twofold Bay in New South Wales and at Hlphinstone, and 
the typical Westwoodii at Gayndah and Peak Downs in 
Queensland and at Elphinstone. 
In addition to Newport’s specimen, the British Museum 
has examples from Sydney and Parramatta, as well as from 
localities near these last, e.g. Ashfield, Bondi, Rose Bay, &e. 
on the Parramatta River (J. Macpherson), from Fern ‘Tree 
Gully in Victoria (Prof: Baldwin Spencer), and from Tasmania 
and Mt. Rumsay, Hobart (/. 1. Thomson). 
Haase separated facundus from Westwoodii on the strength 
