432 BULLETIN: MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 
List of specimens examined. 
No of 
M.C.Z. speci- 
No. mens Ages Sexes Locality Date Collector Remarks 
6965 14 all both New Providence Is- 1904 T. Barbour  Descrip. 
land, Bahamas & G. M. Allen 
7096 9 all both New Providence Is- 1904 A. E. Wight 
land, Bahamas 
6948 6 all both Mangrove Cay, An- 1904 O. Bryant 
dros Island, Bahamas 
o& Bahamas 1886 C.J. Maynard 
ad. oo New Providence Is- 1888 C.S. Dolley 
land, Bahamas 
6912) .1u, sad: o& New Providence Is- 1900 T. Barbour 
land, Bahamas 
5823. 3 > ad. 
6243 
bo 
AMEIVA CHRYSOLAEMA Cope. 
Deseription:— Adult male; M. C. Z. 8622. Manneville, Haiti; — 
1913; W. M. Mann. 
Rostral forming an acute angle behind; nostril on the posterior 
part of the anterior nasal; anterior pair of nasals broadly in contact — 
behind rostral; frontonasal as long as wide, in contact with the loreal; — 
prefrontals broadly in contact; frontal in contact with the first and 
second supraocular; a pair of frontoparietals separated from the — 
third supraocular by a row of granules; five occipitals in a transverse _ 
row the three median ones about the same size and very much larger 
than the outer ones; three large supraciliaries and four or five smaller — 
ones; four supraoculars, the first separated from the loreal; three 
posterior supraoculars separated from the supraciliaries by a double 
row of granules; five and six large supralabials; six and seven large — 
infralabials; between infralabials and chin-shields a wedge of one 
to three rows of granules extending anteriorly to the postmental; 
chin and throat covered with minute granules; a scarcely differenti-— 
ated band of large scales extending across the mid-region of which the 
median granules are largest; on the area between the two throat — 
folds there are a few rows of large hexagonal scales; under side of the 
body with ten longitudinal and thirty-six transverse rows of plates; 
preanal plates in a triangular group four scales wide at the base and 
three scales in height, the larger scales in the middle; on the lower 
arm a double row of antebrachials, one very much wider than the 
other, both breaking up in the mid-region into six or seven series of — 
small scales; on the upper arm two rows, proximally three rows of — 
