244 DE. J. G. DE MAN ON THE PODOPHTHALMOUS 



at its internal side. The remainder of the carpopodite is unarmed, 

 with the exception of a few small tufts of hairs along its upper 

 margin, and its outer and inner surfaces. The hands are com- 

 paratively elongate, being twice and a half as long as broad. 

 The fingers are once and a third as long as the palm. The palm 

 presents a few small spinules along the inner margin of its upper 

 surface, but is covered otherwise only with some small piliferous 

 lines. The smooth, flattened, and slightly hairy inner surface of 

 the palm makes a right angle with the upper surface ; the latter 

 passes gradually into the outer surface, which presents some 

 tufts of hairs, especially along its rounded under margin. The 

 under surface of the palm is smooth and also a little hairy. The 

 fingers have large, spoon-like excavated, horny tips of a black 

 colour, meeting along their whole length, whereas the fingers 

 have a small hiatus between them when closed. The mobile 

 finger is covered on its upper margin with some spinules, a little 

 larger than those of the palm, and arranged in two or three 

 longitudinal rows. The immobile finger also presents similar, 

 somewhat smaller spinules on its upper margin and on its outer 

 surface; but the fingers ^ are unarmed below. The fingers are 

 everywhere rather hairy, the yellow hairs being mostly arranged 

 in longitudinal rows of small transverse tufts. Each finger is 

 armed at its base with two small, acute, conical teeth, situated 

 near the upper margin of the internal cutting-surface, behind 

 one another ; the basal tooth, however, is much smaller than the 

 other. The cutting-surfaces are smooth, presenting only a few 

 small tufts of hairs. 



The legs resemble those of Glibanarms longitarsis. Those of 

 the second and third pairs are rather thinly clad with yellow 

 hairs along their upper and under margins and at their 

 articulations. The basal joints are unarmed, and the mero- 

 podites present only a small acute spine at the distal ends of 

 the under margins of their outer surfaces. The carpopodites 

 are armed with a single, small, acute spine at the distal ends of 

 their upper margins. The slender propodites are quite unarmed ; 

 those of the right legs are a little longer than those of the left. 

 The slender, slightly arcuate dactylopodites are nearly once and 

 a half as long as the propodites, when measured along their 

 upper margins, and they terminate in short, black, acute points. 

 They present a smooth, narrow, longitudinal ridge along their 

 upper margins, and the distal halves of their under margins are 



