302 MR. U. R. HOGG ON SOME 



are two pairs of depressions, one behind the other, divi(.led by a 

 rather broad ridge. 



Viewed from above both rows of eyes are recurved, those of the 

 rear row equal and equidistant two and a half times their diameter 

 apart. The front median eyes are nearer together than the I'eai', 

 and apparently rather larger ; they are situated on the sides of a 

 protuberance, and are as far from the rear eyes as from one 

 another. The respective pairs of side eyes are a similar distance 

 apart. As they are all dark and on black rims, the real size of 

 the eye is difficult to distinguish. The clypeus is as broad as a 

 front median eye. 



The 'mandibles are as long as the cephalothorax, divergent, and 

 protrude at an angle of 45 degrees. They have long upstanding- 

 hairs on the inner side and shorter ones on the outer edge. On the 

 outer margin of the falx-sheath there are five rather long teeth, 

 the upper one on the top edge being the largest. On the inner 

 margin there is one large tooth at the top, one at the corner, then 

 one small one a little way down, and then seven nearer together 

 reaching to the top of the lip. On the inner side of the fang itself, 

 near the base, is a short stout spine midway between the two 

 marginal spines on the top edge of the sheath. 



The maxillce are long, broadest at the anterior end, where they 

 rather bend back with a rounded corner at the outer edge ; from 

 here they slope in to about the middle and then out again. The 

 trochanter of the palp is very long. 



The lip is about two-fifths the height of the maxillse, rounded 

 in front with a rather prominent edge. It broadens out towards 

 the posterior end, which is also rounded, and there is a depression 

 all the way round a little distance from the margin. 



The sternum is a long narrow shield-shape, twice as long as 

 broad, hollowed in front, and with a prominent apophysis at each 

 of the front corners ; it is smooth and shiny, with a few fine up- 

 standing hairs. There is a space between the second and third 

 pair of coxee, and the fourth pair are not quite contiguous to 

 one another. 



The abdomen is long and narrow, straight at the sides and 

 slightly rounded at the front and rear. 



The epigyne is a transverse oval, the inside filled with an oval 

 convexity. 



The ^«Zpt are thin. The tibial joint is twice as long as the 

 patellar. 



The legs are long and thin ; the tibia of the front pair more than 

 six times as long as the patella. There are four pairs of spines at 

 the sides of tibia? 3 and 4 ; the spines are fine and not very long. 



The male is coloured the same as the female, except that the 

 sternum is of the same bright yellow colour as the cephalothorax, 

 maxillae, and legs. 



The mandibles are quite as long as the cephalothorax ; on the 

 inner margin of the falx-sheath are twelve teeth, the second of 

 these being the largest. On the outer side there are three large 



