221 
Hab.—New South Wales: Mount Kosciusko (B. Ingleby, 
— Lucas, and — Guerand, 7,000 ft., in Howitt's collection). 
Type, I. 589. 
A strongly-convex dull species, but with shining elytra. 
Specimens vary somewhat in the punctures of the elytra and 
one has a few fairly well-defined striae, but all agree in having 
the prothorax with very dense punctures, with a minute 
seta arising from each ; on many of them the setae have caused 
mud to adhere uniformly to the surface, giving it a curious 
are 
with baldiensis and creber, from which it may be readily 
distinguished by the prothoracic clothing. 
-PSEUDOHETERONYX BASICOLLIS, n. sp. 
Pl. xxv., figs. 32 and 33; pl. xxvi., fig. 62. 
Black ; parts of antennae, of palpi, and of tarsi obscurely 
reddish. Upper-surface sparsely clothed with short, depressed 
setae, more numerous (but still not very dense) on head than 
elsewhere; prothorax and elytra fringed with stiff blackish 
Setae, similar setae on parts of under-surface and of legs. 
ead with numerous, but not very dense or large, and 
rather shallow punctures, ming crowded on cl ; 
ront margin of the latter gently incurved to middle, hind 
sp 1i 
with numerous punctures. Klytra with sides gently rounded 
Hab.— Australia: (Blackburn’s collection) ; Queensland : 
Museum); New 
(Hamlyn Harris 
South Wales (National Museum). Type, I. 4847 
