270 SAURIA. 



4. Emoa cyanuka, Grd. 



Spec. Char. — Body slender, rather depressed ; scales well developed, 

 disposed upon thirty longitudinal series. Postfrontals separated. 

 Middle occipital plate combined with the united parietals. Auri- 

 cular aperture moderate, subelliptical, with a few small erect scales 

 at the anterior margin. Two middle preanal scales larger than the 

 rest. Tail long and subconical. Above brown or black, with three 

 longitudinal light streaks, middle one extending from the apex of 

 the snout to the base of the tail ; beneath unicolof . 



Stn. — Scincus ci/anurus, Less. Yoy. Coq. Zool. II, i, 1830, 49. PI. iv, fig. 2. 



Scincus cehstinus, Mus. Leyden. (Fide Dumeril & Bibron.) 



Til) qua ci/anura, Gray, Ann. Nat. Hist. II, 1839, 289. 



Tiliqua lessonii, CoCT. Tab. synopt. Scincoid. (Compt. rend. Acad, des Sc. IV, 1837.) 



Tiliqua kienerii, CoCT. Tab. synopt. Scincoid. (Compt. rend. Acad, des Sc. IV, 1837.) 



Eumeces lessonii, DuM. & BiBR. Erp^t. gen. V, 1839, 654. 



Mahouya cyanura, Gray, Catal. Lizz. Brit. Mus. 1845, 96. 



Descr. — This species is one of small size : its body is slender, sub- 

 cylindrical, covered with rather well-developed scales, if compared to 

 those of its congeners. They constitute thirty longitudinal series, a 

 good deal smaller on the sides than on the back and belly ; those of 

 the back being somewhat the largest, especially along the middle line. 

 The two middle preanal scales are a good deal larger than the rest. 

 The upper middle caudal series is quite large and transversely elon- 

 gated, and so is the lower middle series also ; sometimes one double 

 series of ordinary shape intervenes between them. On the sides of 

 the tail, they are nearly equal to those of the back. 



The head is depressed ; the snout narrow and tapering, resembling 

 somewhat that of E. samoensis. The symphyseal plate is larger than 

 the rostral ; the supranasals and postfrontals are kept widely apart 

 by the prefrontal, which is contiguous anteriorly to the rostral, and 

 posteriorly to the vertex plate. The latter is quite elongated, spear- 

 shaped posteriorly. The combined parietals are furthermore united 

 to the middle occipital, forming together a large lozenge. The latero- 

 occipitals are well developed, as usual approximating posteriorly, as do 



