ON THE MYRIOPODA OF BURMA 405 
the inter-antennal area; two curved sulci running forwards and 
internally from the inner angle of the eye; posterior region of 
the head marked with an anterior transverse depression, wider 
mesially, from the middle of which there runs backwards a 
wider and deeper depression, which widens posteriorly. 
Antennae about half as long again as the body. 
Basal plate visible. Tergites with serrate margins, each fur- 
nished with an anterior and a posterior lateral, low, rounded 
prominence, closely punctured and sparsely spicular, the spicules 
stronger and more numerous in the posterior region of the body; 
the stoma-saddles much wider than long, each half low, rounded 
and furnished with two or three irregularly defined series of 
spicules, the stomata slit-like, elongate, the area in which each 
is placed, triangular , widened posteriorly; the last tergite me- 
dianly depressed, narrowed posteriorly, with rounded or lightly 
emarginate hinder border. 
Legs with femora weakly and subserially spicular, patellae 
and tibiae strongly carinate and serrate; tarsi annulate, di- 
stinctly pubescent; anal leg less than three times as long as 
the body. 
Sternites with a strong median sulcus. 
Length up to 31 mm. 
A number of specimens were collected by Sig. L. Fea at 
Palon and two young examples at Bhamò. 
In size this species approaches the preceding two, but it may 
be at once separated from them by its wide stoma-saddles with 
a posteriorly dilated stomatal area. 
4. Seutigera marmorea, sp. n. 
Of small size, moderately robust. 
Colour; ground tint of tergites very pale ochraceo-olivaceous; 
lateral portions of the tergites marbled with dark green, with 
“a conspicuous dark green patch on each side at the posterior 
end; a conspicuous median dark green band, which is itself 
divided longitudinally and mesially by a fine, narrow, testaceous 
