1880.] J. Wood-Mason — On the Lepidopterom Qenus M\\\o\v\. 177 



Length of anterior wing 1*4 ; whence expanse = 2 9 inches. 

 Hab. Waga Hills (S. jE. FealJ. A single specimen. 



2. Mmo'sa. Lena. 



JE. Una, Atkinson, Proc. Zool, Soc. Load. 1871, p. 215, pi. xii, fig. 1, ^. 

 $. " IJPPEESIDE. ^ore wing pale brownish grey, crossed by a 

 dark brown band, interrupted by the nervures from before the apex to near 

 the posterior margin at two-thirds of its length from the base, beyond the 

 band darker, with a slightly marked and incomplete submarginal line, 

 before whicli is a series of five pale lanceolate blotches between the nervures 

 directed towards the outer margin. All the nervures tinged with yellow 

 and more or less dark-bordered. Hind wing : anterior portion from base 

 to outer margin pale, posterior portion bright yellow, crossed by a sub- 

 marginal series of three dark-bordered white blotches, and a fourth fainter 

 blotch between the nervures, forming a short interrupted band from near 

 the apex to the second median nervure. The submedian nervure fringed 

 from its origin to near its extremity with long yellowish hairs, longest and 

 most conspicuous towards its extremity. 



" Undebside. Both ivings crossed by a dark ferruginous band with 

 sharply defined outer edge from the costa of the fore-wing near the 

 apex to near the extremity of the submedian nervure of the hind- wing, 

 and having a faintly traced submarginal line, before which is a series of 

 blind white-centred ocelli. The cell of the fore-wing crossed near its 

 middle by a curved ferruginous band. Hind-wing crossed by a ferruginous 

 band near the base. 



" Antenna; ferruginous ; palpi and legs tawny yellow. 



" Expanse of wings 3|- inches. 



"Hab. Yunan." Moolai, Upper Tennasserim 3,000— 6,000 ft. (Moore). 



Atkinson does not give the sex of tlie specimen described and figured 

 by him, but, as the two specimens in the Indian Museum obtained at the 

 same time are males and agree perfectly in size and markings Avith his 

 figure, he may be presumed to have described a male. In a specimen of the 

 male recently received from the upper Thoungyeen forests, British Burmah, 

 by Captain Gr. F. L. Marsliall, the three white spots on the anterior half of 

 the hind-wing are larger, forming a band divided by the veins. 



(j8.) Forc-wiiiff sliarphj anyulaled at the apex with its outer mart/in arched. 



3. tEmona Pealii. Pl.'VI, Figs. 5, 6, 



Fealii, "Wood-M.ason, Proc. Asiatic Soc. Bengal, July 1880, p. 123. 



S . Closely allied to 2Ein. AmatJmsia. Uppebsibe coloured and 

 marked in the same manner, but with the ocelli as well as the strigaa of 



