Myr. I 
XII. MYRIOPODA AND PROTOTRACHEATA. 
BY 
Albert William Brown. 
MYRIOPODA. 
I. Titles 
II. Biology. 
a. Anatomy, &c. . 
il Distribution . . 
CONTENTS. 
Page 
4 
4 
III. Systematic. 
Ohilopoda . . . . 
Pauropoda (vacant). 
Diplopoda . . . . 
PROTOTRACHEATA. 
Titles 
Tago 
. 6 
. 11 
INTRODUCTION. 
Of the 56 papers recorded here 38 are the work of Messrs. Brolemann, 
Cook, Pocock, Silvestri, and Veriioeff, by far the greater number 
consisting of descriptions of new species and genera. 
The first instalment of Silvestri’s Monograph of the Diplopoda is 
perhaps the most important publication of the year. Schmidt, Gaii- 
uo w ski, and Yeriioeff have dealt with the phylogeny of the group, 
Cook, Roshnstadt, and Yeriioeff with some morphological points, but 
the absence of more papers on morphology is much to be regretted. 
Cook’s papers on the Diplopods of Liberia are valuable for their concise 
summaries of families represented in that region. 
In order to simplify the Systematic portion of the Record, the contents 
of several groups have been arranged in alphabetical sequence without 
regard to family relationship. 
I. TITLES. 
Bozward, J. L. A luminous Centipede. Nature, liii, p. 223. 
BrOlemann, II. AV. (1) Deux Julides de la Faune Mediterraneenne. 
Bull. Soc. ent. France, 1896, No. 3, pp. 43-48. 
. (2) Myriapodes recueillis en Indo-Chine et offerts au Museum 
par M. Pavie. Note preliminaire. Bull. Mus. Paris, 1896, 
pp. 332 & 333. 
