88 BULLETIN BROOKLYN ENTOM. SOC. VOL. VI. January 1884. ] 
Say. Journ. Ac. Phila. 1823, ITI, 140; Lec. Ann. Lye. IV, 176, pl. 13, f. 2; 
rugifrons Dej. Spec. 1825, I, 51; denticulata Hentz, Trans. Am. Philos. Soe. II, 
254; pl. 2, f-1; modesta Dej. Spec. I, 52; obscura Say, Trans. Am. Philos. Soe. I, 
418; unicolor Dej. Spec.. 1, 52; V, 210, Chevr. Col. Mex. II. fasc. 8, nr..177. 
Pulchra Say. Red cupreous, highly polished, with blue or green 
margins, beneath blue; head hairy, labrum short, wide, slightly three— 
toothed; thorax rugose; elytra polished, punctured only near base, with | 
a transverse white abbreviated line on the middle and sometimes a 
round humeral dot. Occurs in Col. and Kans. Length 19 mm. 
Say, Journ. Ac. Phila. 1823, III, 142; Lec. Ed. II, 91; Dej. Spec. Il, 421; 
Lec. Ann. Lye. IV, 175. 
Hornii Schaupp. Black shining glabrous above and beneath. Head 
bald; labrum short with an acute tooth at middle; thorax slightly 
wrinkled at the sides; elytra coarsely but not densely punctured near 
the base, the punctures becoming rapidly finer towards the smooth tip, 
no markings at all. Only one pair in Dr. Horn’s collection from New 
Mexico. Length 14 mm. 
Anthracina || Horn. Trans. Am. Ent. Soc. 1880, VIII, 139, 
Nigrocoerulea Lec. Dark blue, sericeous shining, head glabrous, 
finely rugose; labrum three-toothed; thorax hardly rugose, hairy at 
the sides; elytra obsoletely punctured, near the suture a row of foveze; 
a faint apical lunule. Resembles pumctulaia, var, micans but is stouter. 
Occurs: in Ariz., New Mex. and Col. Lenght 13.5—14 mm. 
Lee. Ann. Lye. IV, 181, ‘pl. 14, f. 9. 
Pimeriana Lec. Elytra blue, head and thorax green, beneath blue; 
head hairy, finely and sparsely rugose; labrum obsoletely three-toothed; 
thorax finely rugose; elytra with shallow punctures, which are nearly 
obliterated near the tip, with a humeral dot and a short transverse 
marginal line. (In the synoptic table, page 80, line 8, there is a 
clerical error, read instead of—smooth towards base—smooth towards 
the apex.) Occurs in Mex. and New Mexico. Length 12 mm. 
Proc. Ac. Phila. 1866, p. 363, viatica Lec. Trans. Am. Philos. Soe. 1856, 
vol. XI, 62. 
Sexguttata Fab. Green above and beneath, head bald, rugose behind; 
labrum strongly three—toothed; thorax slightly rugose; elytra strongly 
punctured with a marginal, anteapical. apical and sometimes a discal 
dot. Occurs'in New York, N>J.; Pa. Mid., Ga.; Jowa,” Vexa Dac: 
Length tro-14 mm. It lives in shady roads or clear woods, hides 
often under s.ones and lose bark. ? 
