LIST OF rUBLICATIONS. 
Araclin, 3 
cidoi ; and cliaracteiizes 2 new genera, belonging to the last two of the 
above families. 
(Cambridge, O. P.) On some new genera and species of Amneidea. 
Ann. N. H. (4) xx. pp. 26-39, pis. vi. & vii. 
Describes and characterizes 2 new genera of Theraidiosidai^ from Aus- 
tralia, Atrax and Aganippe. i\\Q former containing 1 the latter 2 new 
species ; and 1 new genus of Arcyidce, containing 1 species, from Mada- 
gascar. 7 other new species of the families Theraphosidce^ Phoroncididcn, 
and Gastcracanthidoi, from South America, Swan River, Cape York^ 
Madagascar, and Ceylon, are described and figured. 
. On some new and little known Spiders from the Arctic Regions. 
Tom. cit. pp. 273-285, pi. viii. 
Includes some spiders (13 species of Dictynidee, Agelenidce, Theri- 
diidee, and Lycosidai) found in Spitzbergen by the Rev. A. E. Eaton ; in 
North Greenland by Mr. E. Whymper ; and by Captain Feilden and 
Mr. Hart during the late Arctic expedition. 7 of the species are 
described as new, 5 of them bein^ also figured. 
Emekton, J. H. a Comparison of the Spiders of Europe and North 
America. P. Rost. Soc. xix. pp. 68-72. 
States that the greater part of the known spiders of North America 
(about 300) belong to the same genera as those of Northern Europe, and 
about one-fourth “ to the same or similar species ” ; the greater part of 
these belong to the smaller European genera (as Ocyale, 2'ihellus, Eu- 
cJiaria, and Hyptiotes).^ while the genera largely represented in both 
countries (as Lyeosa, Xysticus, Clubiona., Dictyna, and Erigone) have 
fewer species common to both. Several house-spiders, common to both 
countries, have probably been imported from one into the other, while 
many of the most common species (as Ejmra diademata, Clk., of Europe, 
and Agelena ncevia, Heutz, of North America) keep rigidly to their 
own limits. The respective Faunae are conspicuously different, in the 
number of southern spiders coming north in America ; while those southern 
forms which come north in Europe are few. 
. Descriptions of two new Spiders from Colorado. Bull. U. S. 
Geol. Surv. iii. pp. 628 & 529, with woodcuts. 
Describes 2 spp. nu. of the families Drassidee and Epeiridoi. 
Hasselt, a. W. M. van. Araneae Exoticae, quas quondam in Indifi 
Orientali (praesertim insulA, AmboinA) collegit Cel. Dr. C. L. Dole- 
schall. Tijdschr. Ent. xx. pp. 61-56. 
Enumerates 46 species, and figures Epeira caputAupi, Dol. (pi. iv. fig. a), 
and a spider’s nest with very long petiole (fig. b). 
Keyserling, (Graf) Eugen. Ueber amerikanische Spinnenarten der 
Unterordnung Citigradee. Verb. z.-b. Wien, xxvi. [for 1876, pub. in 
i877] pp. 609- 708, pis. vii. & viii. 
Divides the suborder Citigradee into three families, Lycosoidee^ Oxyo~ 
poidee, and Ctenoidee, and gives an analytical table of genera of the first 
and last. One new genus and 34 new species of Lycosoidee^ 3 new genera 
