
130 RECORDS OF THE S.A, MUSEUM 
Miscellaneous Species. 
The remaining six ‘‘ sculptured’? Australian species form a varied assemblage; the female 
is known only in sabulosa, which makes it still more impossible to group them satisfactorily. 
C. simula alone has a long ridge running back from the antennal tooth, as well as other 
longitudinal ridges on the sides of the carapace, and hus the dorsal and lateral contours of the 
carapace broken and uneven owing to the seulpture. 
C. cana, munda and pruvinosa all have the general form of the carapace as in the fully adult 
male of tribulis and mawsonae (with the greatest width across the pseudolateral lobes) but the 
sculpture is entirely different; the female of these species should prove of interest. 
C, sabulosa and spilotes have eaeh side of the carapace relatively smooth, the single for- 
wardly curved ridge being not at all prominent; it is obsolete for the greater part of ibs length 
in the female of the first-named. C. spilotes (Hale, 1928, p. 36, fig. 5-G) has a sharply defined, 
fine ridge traversing the aide, 
CYCLASPIS SIMULA Bp. nov. 
Young male. Integument firm, but of egg-shell fragility; finely and evenly 
squamose throughout, 
Carapace in lateral view with dorsal margin slightly elevated posteriorly, 

Fig. 49. Cyclaspis simula, type male; A, lateral view; B, carapace from above; (, front 
portion of earapace from the side (A and B, 30; C, x 53). 
thence rising to an abrupt peak at about middle of length (see fig. 49, A); one- 
third of total length of animal, depth about two-thirds length, and one-fifth 
greater than breadth; there is a somewhat angular, antero-lateral tumidity on 
each side, and above this a series of four tubercles; on the lower half of the side 
and near the posterior margin are two short carinae, one ahove the other, while 
from the antennal tooth a longer carina curves backwards to almost meet the 
lower of the short carinae; there is a group of four tubercles in front of the upper 
short carina. Psendorostral lobes reaching to end of oeular lobe. Ocular lobe 
large, barely longer than wide; lenses sooty. Antennal notch rather narrow and 
tooth subacute, 
