IN" THE BEITISH AND OOPENHAG-EN MUSEUMS. 233 



The ehela is 3'7 as long as wide ; the hand, which is distinctly narrower than the 



trochanter is long, is 1-2 shorter but 1-4 wider than tibia, is almost 1-8 as long as wide, 



distinctly wider than deep, and scarcely as long as fingers, which only gape a trifle, 



^ , „ „, when closed. The immovable finoer possesses anteriorly only a 



Test-fig. 64. . „ » i : J 



single '•'■spot" placed just beyond and beneath the third tactile 



hair, which is placed almost in the middle ; the immovable finger 



has three spots posteriorly and the movable two only, arranged 



as figured (fig. 3 h). 



Coocce (text-fig. 64). — The second pair are distinctly widened 



out from the rather short interior margin and become rather 



suddenly attenuated towards the base, while the third pair are 



distinctly triangular, the inner margin being a mere point. The 



\^\\^ ^^V // ^ I fourth pair are fairly long and distinctly widened out, of somewhat 



triangular appearance, as the fairly long interior margin is not 

 (77j. n«/w* Balz., cJ . Cosk n t • i ,■ i i i i ^ 



J , _„ well limited from the much longer moderately concave posterior 



and sexual area, x 57. _ _ ^ ■ *- 



one ; the anterior margin is also somewhat concave basally. 



Legs (PL XXIX. figs. 3 c-e). — Proximal joints, at least, with scale-shaped granules ; 

 the hairs are moderately long and more or less strongly clavate dorsally except in 

 tarsus terminally ; ventrally they vary from distinctly clavate to pointed and almost 

 simple. A short " tactile " hair is present on tarsus IV., f removed from the base. 

 The trocliantin of the first pair of legs is somewhat wider than the femur proper, and 

 the articulation is poorly developed, only with an anterior median tooth as well as a 

 posterior more dorsally placed, where the margin of the trochantin overlaps the base 

 of the following joint. The tarsus, which is of almost equal length with the tibia, is 

 distinctly 5 as long as deep. The femur of the fourth pair of legs, which is raised 

 fairly gradually beyond the stalk, is three times as long as deep, scarcely I'l as long 

 as tibia, and almost 2 "5 as low as tarsus is long. 



Colour. — Palps are reddish brown, and body, especially cephalothorax, darker brown. 



Measurements. — Cephalothorax 0'690 (0-598); abdomen 1-196 (0-805) mm. 



Palps: trochanter 0-299 (0-184); femur 0-690 (0-138); tibia 0-598(0-184); hand 

 0-483 (0-265), depth 0-230 ; finger 0-483 mm. 



LegL: femur i. 0-365 (0-114), trochantin 0-099 (0-120); tibia 0-296 (0-076); 

 tarsus 0-296 (0-056) mm. 



Leg IV.: femur 0-456 (0-152); tibia 0-426 (0-091); tarsus 0-372 (0-068) mm. 



Fe7nale. 



Abdomen &c. — Number of hairs along- posterior m.argin of tergites greater (viz. 12), 

 and often also a greater number in front of row. The galea is longer and more slender^ 

 with six terminal teeth, and distinctly extending beyond the terminal hair [cf. Balzan's 

 fig. 15 a, $ ). 



VOL. XVIII. — PAKT III. No. 3. — October, 1908. 2e; 



