1893.] SPECIES OF MOTHS FROM INDIA. 385 



•with dark grey and blackish along the inner margin. Head and 

 thorax fawn-colour ; abdomen more mixed with grey. Underside 

 pale grey, slightly glossy, with alternate light and dark grey 

 bands ; both wings with black cell-spot. 



Expanse of wings 26 miUim. 



Hab. Khasia Hills. 



Subfam. Ortholithin.i;. 

 Oetholitha duplicata, sp. n. 



S . Fore wings pale cream-colour; the costa broadly and suffusedly 

 greyish fuscous ; basal patch also greyish fuscous, its outer edge 

 oblique, darker, not nearly reaching the costa ; umer edge of 

 central fascia represented by a long, curved, dark brown tooth, not 

 quite reaching the cell-spot, which is linear and dark brow n ; outer 

 edge, by a similar but longer and more curved fascia-form marking, 

 reaching only to the subcostal ; space between them pure cream- 

 colour ; the narrow pale space between the basal patch and central 

 fascia traversed by a grey line, thickening upwards ; beyond the 

 central fascia a pale curved fascia of the same A^idth as the dark 

 exterior margin of the central fascia, traversed by 2 somewhat 

 geminated brownish lines ; hind margin brownish, the inner half 

 the dax'ker, with a pale line down the middle ; fringes fuscous. 

 Hind wings creamy white, slightly darker towards the fringes. 

 Head, thorax, and antennae greyish fuscous ; abdomen ligluer. 

 Underside ochreous, almost entirely suflFused with pinkish grey, 

 with the upper markings shoeing through. 



Expanse of wings 38 mdlim. 



Hah. Chumbi. 



[My native collectors brought a few examples of this distinct 

 species from the Tibet frontier in 1883, and I have since had one 

 from Moller ; I believe it occurs at great elevations. — H. J. E.'\ 



Subfam. UEAPTEEYGINiE. 

 SlEINOPTEETX EUriLINEATA, Sp. n. 



S 2 . Larger and brighter than rujivinctata, Wlk., and with the 

 2 transverse lines also reddish like the costa and fringes. 



Hub. Khasia and Naga Hills ; Sikkim. 



[The type specimen of this, which I took in September in the 

 Khasia Hills, and which agrees with a Naga Hill specimen, is 

 distinct enough, but some other Naga and Sikkim specimens show 

 that the characters on which Mr. Warren has relied are not 

 very constant, and I am unable at present to confirm his opinion. 

 —M. J. E.'] 



SlEINOPTEETX UNDTJLIFEEA, sp. U. 



cJ . Tore wings pale canary-yellow, more or less thickly strewn 

 with coarse rusty, or rusty-brown, atoms, which are finer and denser 

 along the costa, the base of which is brownish ; 2 oblique rusty- 

 brown lines, one from ^ of the inner margin to the costa beyond 



