552 SIR OEOUGE n. KENRICK ON' 



maro'ined with dark ; below the costa a,t end of cell is a lunated 

 mark and there is another smaller one nearer the base. 



Hind wing pale semihyaline, with traces of dark ante- and post- 

 median lines, the hind margin with a broa.d dark shade ; fringes 

 pale. 



Exp. 42 mm. 



Dinawa, British New Guinea. 



Glyphodes polyzonalts Hmpsn. 



Glyphodes magnificalis, sp. n. (PL LXVIIT. fig. 17.) 



Head, palpi, and antenn?e black ; legs and underside golden. 

 Thorax black, with collar and patagia ochreons ; abdomen black 

 above. 



Fore wing pale ochreons ; an oblique black band beginning as a 

 fine line on the base of the costa reaches a point two-thirds along 

 the inner margin, fi'om this there stretches a nearly vertical 

 black band with curved outer side to the costa,. There is a sub- 

 terminal cloud of brown intersected by two fine metallic purple 

 lines, on the inner side of this are two triangular black mai-ks 

 united in the middle. All the bLxck marks are shot with metallic 

 blue. 



Hind wing pale ochreons, with an interrupted dark postmedian 

 line. On the middle of the edge of the wing are tliree white- 

 centred black dots on a. faint bright line. 



Exp. 40 mm. 



Arfak Mts., 4000 feet. 



The only specimen is a female. 



Glyphodes nigricincta, sp. n. (PI. LXVIII. fig. 16.) 



Head, palpi, and antennos dai^k brown ; legs white, the joints 

 dark brown on the outer side ; front of thorax black ; patagia 

 white ; abdomen grey, with a. black band at base. 



Fore wing white, a dark grey spot in the middle of the cell and 

 a second at the end ; the outer half of the wing very dark grey. 



Hind wing white, with grey lunule and dark grey apical patch. 

 Fringes smoky, fading into white towards the angle of the hind 

 wing. 



Exp. 26 mm. 



Arfak Mts., 4000 feet. 



GlYPHOBES PSEUDOCiESALIS, sp. n. (PI. LXVIII. fig. 18.) 

 Differs from ccesalis Wlk. in the absence of hyaline patches, in 

 having the fringes unspotted whereas in ccesalis the dark spots 

 give the wings a distinctly emarginate appearance, and in the 

 mai'kings of the fore wing : these consist of a basal line indicated 

 by dots, antemedia.n, median, and postmedian lines, each of which 

 is double and the inner lines of the median and postmedian are 

 connected. In ccesalis these double lines are wider apart, more 

 irregular, and filled in witli darker instead of with the ground- 

 colour as in pseudoccescolis. Beyond the postmedian line in ccesalis 



