184 BULLETIN 46, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



As this is the most northern species of the genus that has been 

 found, I have given it the specific Dame of borealis. 



8. Euryurus evides Bollman. 

 Paradesmus evides Bollman. Ent. Amer., 229, 1887 (Winona, Minn.). 

 Very common. 



9. Scytonotus granulatus (Say). 

 Not common. 



10. Polydesmus serratus Say. 

 Very common. 



11. Pontaria virginiensis brunnea Bollman. 

 Common. 



12. Linotaenia fulva (Sager). 

 Common. 



13. Geophilus urbicus Meinert. 



Geophilus gracilis Harger. Amer. Journ.Sci. and Arts, 118, 1872 (New Haven, Conn.; 



preoccupied). 

 Geophilus urbicus Meinert. Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., 218, 1856 (Cambridge, Mass.). 



Prof. Holzinger has sent me a male in a tolerably good condition 

 which I refer to this species. As G. gracilis Harger is preoccupied, 

 urbicus Meinert must take its place. 



14. Geophilus setiger Bollman. 

 Geophilus setiger Bollman. Ent. Amer., 82, 1887 (Salem, Ind.). 



There is a male in the collection that agrees perfectly well with the 

 types of this species. 



15. Geophilus foveatus (McNeill). 



Mecistocephalus foveatus McNeill. Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 325, 1887 (Pensacola, Fla.; 

 name onlxj); McNeill, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 333, 1887 (Bloomington, Ind.). 



There is one specimen that agrees with those from more southern 

 localities. 



16. Geophilus bipuncticeps Wood. 

 Common. 



17. Scolopocryptops sexspinosus (Say). 



Common. These specimens differ from all known to me from other 

 localities in most times having the spine on the inner sides of anal legs 

 obliterated; otherwise they are identical. 



18. Henicops fulvicornis (Meinert). 



I have seen about a dozen specimens, more or less mutilated as to 

 an tenure and legs, so that very much can not be ascertained with cer- 

 tainty, but they seem to agree with the published descriptions. This 

 makes the third locality from which specimens have been reported in 

 North America. 



