ON THE MYRIOPODA OF BURMA © 421 
above with a single minute posterior internal spine, the patella 
and tibia with two such spines, one internal and one external, 
femur and tibia posteriorly sulcate above. 
Legs furnished with stronger and weaker, more or less spini- 
form hairs. 
Length about 14 mm. 
Habitat. Palon; three specimens collected by Sig. L. Fea. 
This species is very distinct. In the continuation of the dorsal 
sulci on to the head-plate it seems to approach Cr. sulcata, of 
Haase from Australia; but in this last named form the cephalic 
sulci are complete, running from the anterior to the posterior 
border of the head, whereas in Cr. feae they are present only 
in the posterior half of this plate. Moreover Cr. sudcata has an 
entirely different arrangement of the sulci of the first tergite. 
With respect to these sulci Cr. feae is quite peculiar and re- 
sembles some species of the genus Newportia. 
22. Cryptops doriae, sp. n. 
Colour; wholly ochraceous or testaceous. 
Head plate about as wide as it is long, sparsely hairy, covered 
behind by the first tergite, not sulcate. 
Antennae somewhat slender, densely pubescent. 
Maxillary sternite punctured and hairy, with anterior border 
nearly straight and furnished on each side with four symme- 
trically arranged setae. 
First tergite overlapping the head-plate, not sulcate; basal 
plate invisible; the rest of the tergites, except the last and the 
second and third, marked with the four normal sulci and with 
a low median longitudinal ridge; sparsely and shortly hairy ; 
lateral margins unraised. 
Sternites marked with the normal cross-shaped sulci. 
Anal somite; tergite and sternite of normal form; plewrae smooth 
behind, furnished in front with about 17 larger and smaller 
pores; /egs; femur and patella with a median notch in the 
middle of the superior posterior margin, tibia and first tarsal 
