308 MR. H. R. HOGG ON SOME 



are three pairs of spines on the under side, on metatarsus of same 

 a pair of very long spines at tlie base underneath, and .another 

 about the middle at the side. On tibia 4 are three long spines on 

 the upper side and three pairs on the under. On metatarsus 4 

 are two pairs on the under side, three long spines on the outer 

 side, and three long single ones on the upper side. 



The tibia and patella of the palp are of equal length. 



The measixrements (in millimetres) are as follows : — 



Long. Broad. 



Cephalothorax ... 3| i -^^ 



Abdomen 5^ 4 



Mandibles ij 



Pat. & Metat. 

 Coxa. Tr. & fem. tib. & tars. 



Legs 1. li 4 4i 4i = 141 



2. 1| 4 4^4^= 14i 



3. 1 3 3| 4~ = 111 



4. U 5 5 Qi = 18 

 Palpi I 2 2 l| = 6 



One female from Mt. Peel, Canterbury, collected by Mr. R. N. 

 Hawkes. 



This species would appear to be somewhat near M. Simon's 

 A. vittatus from Noumea, but the median abdominal stripe 

 extends the whole length, and is pale brown instead of intense 

 black. The legs are more heavily bespined, and the femora, 

 although streaked longitudinally, are not ringed with black. 



Mynoglenes chiltoni, sp. n. (Text-fig. 95.) 



Male. The cephalothorax is of a i-ather deep yellow-brown, 

 darker brown in the striations, but paler again on the rear slope. 

 The eyes are pale yellow. The mandibles bright yellow-brown 

 with red fangs. Lip and maxillse about the same as the man- 

 dibles. The sternum darker, and dingier, is covered with fine 

 granulations. The legs are pale yellov/ all over, with fine brown 

 hairs paler towards the extremities. 



The abdomen, both on the upper and lower sides, is black-brown, 

 scantily covered with fine reciimbent brown hairs. 



The cephalic part of the cephalothorax is slightly raised above 

 the thoracic and rounded in front, where it is one-half the width 

 of the broadest part, the latter being two-thirds of its total length. 

 The surface of the thoracic part is smooth, without hairs, very 

 finely granulated. The central fovea is shallow and round, with 

 four pairs of small latei'al furrows, and a broader and deeper pair 

 round the margin of the cephalic part, all radiating from the 

 fovea. 



The eyes of the rear row are equal, the median their diameter 

 apart, and the laterals one and a half diameters therefrom ; these, 

 with the front laterals touching them, lie on prominent tubercles. 



