ON THE OCCURRENCE OF FACE URNS IN BRAZIL. 607 
behind, and an indistinct pale golden streak along the base of the fringe from the costa 
not quite to the inner ‘angle; while it seems not to have the two oblique lines of black 
seales described in C. coffeellum, nor the golden band which partially surrounds the 
Mr. Chambers says also, in his note of correction, that “in the Transactions of the 
London Entomological Society, Ser. 2, Vol. v, pp. 21 and 27, rhe in Ser. 3, Vol. ii, p. 101, 
certainly two, es, pine my me pearap od’ s not at fault, three species [of Cemiostoma}, 
are desc India.” ve examined the pages to which he evidently zee 
to refer, and find tiat se th rH species mentioned, C. wailesellum and C. lotellum 
said to come from England. 
I have had a new ey of the apene er struck off, because the former 
One contained some errors introduced by the t, who transfe my figures fro 
Some of the figures are ineomplet, because sey have only drawn what I 
could see. This is especially the case with the larv 
ON THE OCCURRENCE OF FACE URNS IN BRAZIL. 
BY PROF. CHARLES FRED. HARTT. 
“Os my visit last year to Brazil, my good friend, Senhor Fer- 
reira Penna, showed me in the Museum of Pará a remarkably 
fine, well-preserved, and curiously-shaped burial vase of the 
class called by the Germans gesichtsurnen, or face urns, which had 
n obtained from a cave on the Rio Maracé, a little river in the 
Province of Pará, emptying into the Amazonas some fifty miles 
above Macapá. Of this urn, at his desire, I made the accom- 
Teel rough sketch with a few notes for publication in the Niru- 
Constructed as to rest on the ground. The arms kr their origin 
4 distance from the top of the body of the urn less than a 
: Bog measurements given in this article are approximate, but were carefully esti- 
a 
