1889.] INDIAN LEPIDOPTERA. 423 



Hab. Karachi, Jimpir, Tatta. Two pairs taken in April 1885-6. 

 A. larger insect than S. ulbirenalis, VValker, and greyer in colour, 

 with but a single, transverse, ill-defined, discal, denticulated band. 



GEOMETEES. 



EUSCHEMID^. 



MiLioNiA LUCULENTA, n. sp. (Plate XLIII. fig. 3.) 



Deep black ; wings with some bright blue streaks near the base, 

 with a bright orange-crimson medial band across both wings ; on 

 the fore wing the band inclines from the costa before the middle to 

 the hinder margin beyond the middle, is nearly straight in its central 

 portion on the outer side, but bends abruptly on to both margins, 

 and is curved on its inner side ; on the hind wing the band is 

 slightly narrower, is slightly sinuous, and extends from the abdominal 

 margin, one third from the anal angle, to the end of the cell, where 

 it is elbowed outwardly, and tliere is a small crimson spot between 

 the end of the band and the costa. 



Below same as above ; antennae, head, body above and below, and 

 legs black. 



Expanse of wings 2j*^- inches. 



Hab. Andaman Islands. One example in the Indian Museum. 



Allied to M. hutleri, Druce, P. Z. S. 1882, p. 7Sl, pi. Ixi. fig. 4, 

 from Sumatra, but differs in the band on the fore wing being broader 

 and not dentate at the end of the cell ; the band on the hind wing is 

 narrow and disposed across the middle of the wing. 



E N N O M I D ^. 

 CrOCALLIS BILINEARIA, n. Sp. 



Allied to Crocallis angularia, Moore. 



Male and female. Yellowish fawn-colour, thickly irrorated with 

 minute, ill-defined, blackish atoms, which are more or less confluent, 

 and form short, transverse, indistinct strigse ; a blackish spot with a 

 white centre at the end of the cell in both wings ; a postmedial, 

 brownish, indistinct line, outwardly edged with white, across both 

 wings, recurved in fore wings, slightly sinuous in hind wing, and 

 an antemedial, brownish, outwardly curved line across fore wing ; 

 this line is not nearly so distinct as the other, and is obsolete in some 

 specimens ; a very indistinct, antemedial, erect, diffused fine on the 

 fore wing. Hind wings paler than fore wings ; marginal line reddish 

 brown, fringe white ; scollops on fore wing (which are less in the 

 male than in the female) formed as in C. angularia. 



Underside paler, colour uniform, markings as above. 



Expanse of wings 2-^^ inches. 



Hab. Kassaoli; one specimen from the late Capt. Reed's col- 

 lection. Kulu ; two specimens from the Indian Museum. 



Near to C. angularia, but differs from it in its colour and in the 

 much less prominent transverse lines, of which the antemedial line 

 on the fore wing is erect, straight, and somewhat outwardly oblique, 

 this line in C. angularia being outwardly curved and angulated on 



