ON THE MYRIOPODA OF BURMA 407 
Se. feae, which it resembles in its wide stoma-saddles and po- 
steriorly dilated stomatal areas. 
Two more specimens of Scutigera were obtained by Sig. L. Fea, 
but the condition of these is so imperfect that I have not at- 
tempted to identify them. One of them was from Thagata on 
Mt. Mooleyit, in Tenasserim, and the other was from the same 
mountain, at an altitude of 1800-1900 m. 
LITHOBIIDAE 
5. Lithobius'(Archilithobius) Dirmanicus, sp n. 
Small and slender. Colour ochraceo-olivaceous, sternites, legs 
and posterior borders of tergites paler; anterior half of head 
and distal segments of antennae fuscous; posterior half of head 
testaceous. 
Antennae long, hirsute; composed of twenty segments; last 
segment longer than the penultimate. 
Ocelli about six on each side, arranged in two rows. 
Tergites more or less rugulose. Seventh, ninth and eleventh 
with rounded angles. 
Coxae of maxillary feet armed on each side with five or six 
more or less conspicuous teeth. 
Coxal pores rounded; arranged in single rows composed of 
three or four. : 
Anal legs long, armed. beneath with spines as follows 1.1.1.0; 
claw with basal spur. Female generative forceps with trilobate 
claw and two spurs on each side. 
Length about 10 mm. 
Locality: Tharrawaddy (E. W. Oates), Palon (L. Fea). 
The sole Oriental species of this sub-genus is L. grossidens, 
. Meinert, from the Nicobar Islands. But grossidens has longer 
antennae, many more eyes and a single claw on the anal 
legs. ; 
