Zoe BULLETIN: MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 
to anterior and also to posterior laterals. Lateral eyes on each side 
subcontiguous. Clypeus narrow, its width not exceeding the radius 
of an anterior lateral eye. 
Labium wider than long. 
Lower margin of chelicera with one tooth; upper with three of 
which the median is largest. 
Legs slender; well spined; tarsi scopulate but not densely so. 
Inferior spinnerets widely separated; median spinnerets moderate, 
cylindrical. ; 
Genotype.— A podrassus andinus, sp. nov. 
Related to Leptodrassus Simon, but differing in the much narrower 
clypeus, more strongly recurved eye-rows, in having the posterior 
median eyes decidedly farther from each other than from the laterals, 
the tarsi moderately scopulate, and the inferior spinnerets widely 
separated instead of connivent. 
APODRASSUS ANDINUS, sp. nov. 
Plate 12, fig. 3-8. 
Carapace and legs light brown, the carapace and femora slightly 
dusky. Sternum and coxae of legs beneath clearer, more testaceous. 
Abdomen beneath light brown, above darker, dusky brown. 
Posterior row of eyes very strongly procurved, a line tangent to the 
anterior edges of the medians being nearly tangent to the posterior 
edges of the laterals; medians elongate (axes to each other as 8:5), 
set very obliquely, separated by a distance equal to the lesser diam- 
eter, closer to the laterals about three fifths as far; lateral eyes a little 
larger than the medians (long diameters about as 9:8), about half 
their radius from the anterior laterals to which they are subequal in 
size. Anterior row of eyes scarcely longer than the posterior; in 
dorsal view a little procurved, in anterior view strongly so, a line 
tangent to lower edges of medians passing through caudal third of 
laterals; medians circular with diameter larger than the long diameter 
of the laterals. (10:9), three fifths their diameter apart, much closer 
both to the anterior and the posterior laterals; laterals separated 
from lower edge of clypeus by a distance equal to their radius or a 
little less, the medians by about four fifths their diameter, (Plate 12, 
fig. 5). 
