402 R. I. POCOCK 
Concerning these the only ones about which I feel any doubts 
are the species of Scutigera. But the species of this genus are 
so exceedingly hard to determine that I think few experienced 
in the matter will blame me if I have described as new any 
form that has been previously made known. Three species only 
of Lithobius have been hitherto recorded from the Oriental Re- 
gion, so it is not surprising that both the species obtained in 
Burma have certainly not been described before this. The two 
new species of Scolopendra are well marked. The two species 
of Otostigma and Heterostoma are also undoubtedly new; the 
same may be said of the Cryptops and of the three species of 
Geophilidae. Of the forms that are not new perhaps the most 
interesting is Ot. rugulosum. It is remarkable that this species 
should be so exceedingly common in Burma and yet should ere 
this have never been met with in any part of the Oriental 
Region. 
ANAMORPHA. 
- SCUTIGERIDAE. 
1. Seutigera longicornis (Fasr.), Haase. 
Die Indisch-Australischen Chilopoden p. 17, pl. I, fig. 27; pl. II, fig. 33, 1887. 
Only two specimens, which I refer to this. species, were 
obtained by Sig. L. Fea. One from Meetan (N. Tenasserim, on 
the Houngdarau River) measuring 36 mm. is of an obscure 
olivaceo-ochraceo-ferrugineous ground colour with faint indica- 
tions of.a paler median band; the stoma-saddles wholly pale 
coloured and more ferrugineous than the rest of the tergites ; 
the legs with wholly ochraceous tibia and tarso-metatarsus, the 
patella marked with two bands of dark-green and the femora 
at the posterior end of the body with a single patch of green 
beneath. The stoma-saddles are long and high and the. stomatal 
area narrow, elongate and not dilated behind. 
The second specimen from the Farm Caves (Moulmein) agrees 
