204 Annals of the South African Museum. 



{B. V. Jutrsencha), kindly lent by Di\ Gunning, of the Pretoria 

 Museum : Number of pectinal teeth 14-19 ; length of cephalothorax 

 12f-14 mm. ; distance of eyes from anterior margin SJg— 2-1- times 

 their distance from hind margin ; finger-keel granular in the proximal 

 half, smooth in the distal half or third, rarely granular almost 

 throughout its length ; secondary keel of hand granular, strong 

 distally but very weak or obsolete proximally; interocular area 

 almost entirely smooth, or the anterior and medial part more or less 

 roughened with very minute granulation ; tarsus of fourth leg often 

 with only three spines on the outer terminal lobe ; total length 

 85-99 mm. These specimens closely resemble those described under 

 (e) in my previous paper (p. 162), but they are larger and the colour 

 is not reddish, the tail, legs, and pedipalps being pale yellowish 

 to yellowish brown. (S. A. Mus. reg. no. 5076.) 



Gen. HADOGENES Krpln. 

 Hadogenes granulatus, n. sp. 



Adult 3' (dry). — Colour reddish brown, the legs paler, the cephalo- 

 thorax somewhat blackened laterally on each side of the interocular 

 area ; pedipalps with black crests and fingers ; vesicle yellowish. 



Cephalothorax broader than long, the frontal margin nearly straight, 

 not emarginate in the middle ; the upper surface very densely 

 granular throughout, the granulation fine, except that on the sides 

 of the cephalothorax and in the depressed area in front of the median 

 tubercle, where it is much coarser than elsewhere and plainly visible 

 to the unaided eye ; lateral eyes small, equal, the middle eye distant 

 about ^ of its diameter from the anterior and almost its own diameter 

 from the posterior eye ; superciliary ridges of median eyes weakly 

 crenular above, granular behind. 



Tergites 1-6 very finely shagreened, except on the broad anterior 

 raised borders, which are mostly nearly smooth ; seventh segment 

 as long as broad, narrowed behind but not semicircularly rounded, 

 the upper surface finely shagreened, with coarser granulation towards 

 the sides behind ; the broad anterior raised border of the seventh 

 segment very minutely granular, emarginate behind and provided 

 with the usual pair of small pits at hind margin. 



Sternites smooth and polished, the last segment with a pair of 

 very large and deep apical depressions. 



Tail very long, six times the length of the cephalothorax, which is 

 equal to the first caudal segment together with slightly less than ^ of 



