BY FREDERICK A. A. SKUSE. 
1193 
fore legs are missing in the only two specimens I have) brownish- 
ochraceons, the tibiae and tarsi darker than the femora. Wings 
somewhat longer than the abdomen, pellucid, with a greyish tint, 
and the following indistinct pale brownish-grey markings : the 
apex entirely clouded from the tip of the posterior branch of the 
third longitudinal vein ; immediately behind the latter is an 
arcuated fascia ; at about an equal distance behind this is another 
similar but less distict band, apparently obsolete between the 
anterior branch of the fourth longitudinal vein and the posterior 
branch of the third longitudinal vein ; lastly two small more or 
less oblong patches occur one above the other at a similar distance 
behind the last band, the first reaches from the first to the third 
longitudinal vein, enveloping the small marginal cell, the other is 
on the posterior margin of the wing, bordered anteriorly by the 
extremity of the rudimentary fifth longitudinal vein ; veins brown. 
Auxiliary vein joining the costa opposite the apex of the marginal 
cell; sub-costal cross-vein situated opposite the origin of the third 
longitudinal vein ; first longitudinal vein reaching the costa a short 
distance before the tip of the posterior branch of the third 
longitudinal vein ; marginal cross-vein situated opposite the base 
ot the fork, and much before the middle of the first longitudinal 
vein ; costal vein extending beyond the tip of the second 
longitudinal vein about 1 the distance from that to the tip of the 
anterior branch of the third longitudinal ; fifth longitudinal vein 
distinct, stopping a short distance from the margin of the wing ; 
no sixth longitudinal vein. 
Ilab. — Gawler, South Australia. 
Ohs . — The above description was taken from two imperfect 
specimens of the (J, the only members entirely absent in both 
l)eing the fore-legs ; however, the shape, covering and venation of 
the wings, and the structure of the palpi present entirely satis- 
factory distinctive characters, and the species deserves to be 
considered as a separate genus, whose nearest affinity appears to 
\>e Lasionoma, Winn., on the one hand, and I'olylpida, Winn., on 
the other. 
