nRi>oD TIT — ski'tT';ni)I':cim — \'.n: 
4] 
Indiana. — Dcarlxxii, I'osryi '!). 
Maryland. Aiuh' Aruiulcl, CaKfil. riuulcs. rriiicc (Icor^'c, St. .Mary. 
MicHHJAN. — Kalaina/.oo. 
New Jeuskv. — Entirr Siatf. 
Nknv ^'()KK. -.\ll)any, Coliiinhia, I)iit('h(\ss, Greene Oiaiiirc. I'uiiiam. Keii>s(la(r, 
Rockland. Saratoga, Ulster. \\'a.>^liington, Westchester, and on Siabii l>lanil ami Loii^ 
Island. 
NouTH Taudlina. — Berti(>(?\ Davie(?), Forsyth(?), Guilford. Orange, Pxii(kin<^- 
luim. Kowan. Stokes, Surry. \Vake(?), Warren(?), Yadkin(?). 
Pennsylvania. — Berks, Bucks, Chester, Dauphin, Delaware, Lancaster, Lebanon, 
Lehigh. Montgomery, Northampton, Philadelphia, Pike. Potter, Schuylkill. Wyoming. 
\'iK(;iMA. All)eniarl(\ Alexandria, .\ndiersl, Ai)j)()nial tox, I'edlord. 1 >uckiiii:liain. 
¥lG. G.— Map showing distribution of Brood III, 1"J12. 
Campbell, Caroline, Charlotte, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, Fluvanna, Goochland, 
Hanover, Henrico, James City, Loudoun, Louisa, Lunenburg, ^ladison, Page, Pitt- 
sylvania, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Rappahannock, Spottsylvania. Stafford. 
West Virginia. — Brooke(?). 
Brood Ul—SrptfnH('nm—^9^2. (Fig. 6.) 
This brood, described by Walsh-Riley as Brood IX (XIII of Kiley) 
is one of the more important of the West(>rn 17-year l)roods, its 
most compact ])ody lyin<r in tlio States of Iowa and Missouri. It is 
closely allied in distri])iiti(^n to Brood 1\', hut .shows little relation- 
ship with Brood 11. Records are <^iv(>ii hy Dr. G. B. Smith in both 
Iowa and Illinois in 1844, and it has Ix-en regularly recorded since, 
