334 Mr. R. T. Giinther on the Distribution of 
internally edged with whitish. Underside: both wings pale 
ochreous grey. Primaries with a darker spot at the end of 
the cell, edged with whitish; beyond this is a transverse 
sharply angled row of large darker spots, preceded by indefi- 
nite white dashes and edged laterally with white; this row 
extends from the costa just beyond the middle to near the 
middle of the inner margin, and is angled outwardly ; beyond 
this is arow of darker lunules indefinitely and indistinctly 
edged with whitish; posterior margin finely dark. Second- 
aries with a small dark spot on the costa near the base, 
followed by a larger one about the centre of the costa; at the 
end of the cell is a rather large darkish spot laterally edged 
with whitish and paler in the centre, below which is another 
similar spot touching the inner margin ; from this spot arises 
a curved row of similar spots extending up to the lower outer 
edge of the second dark costal spot; beyond this is a sub- 
marginal row of lunules laterally edged with whitish, outside 
which is a marginal row of smaller but more definite similar 
lunules ; posterior margin finely dark; anal angle with two 
small black spots, above which, between the first and second 
median veins, is a larger black spot margined internally with 
yellow; slight blue metallic scaling is scattered over these 
spots. 
; 9. Upperside like the male, except that there is no white 
patch on the primaries, though there is a slight indication of 
a paler brown patch, and in the secondaries the marginal 
spots at the anal angle are continued nearly up to the apex. 
The underside pattern is the same, but in both wings the 
transverse row of large spots is very broadly margined 
externally with white, and the lunular marginal row is larger 
and more distinct, whilst in the primaries the row of large 
spots instead of being sharply angled is only curved. 
Exp. alar., ¢ 31, 2? 32 millim. 
This species, which was taken in January, is somewhere 
near L. lycenotdes ; but it is not white underneath as that 
species is, and the pattern is different. 
XXVIII.—On the Distribution of Mid-water Chetognatha in 
the North Atlantic during the Month of November. By 
R. T. Ginwrner, M.A., F.R.G.S. 
[Plate XXIV.] 
A report on the Celenterata obtained by Mr. George 
Murray during the cruise of the ‘Oceana’? in November 
1898 appeared in the ‘ Annals’ for April last. The organisms 
