252 Ins. 
NEUROPTERA. 
BY 
Robert McLachlan, F.R.S., F.L.S., &c. 
The General Subject. 
McLachlan, Robert. Neuroptera of the Hawaiian Islands. Ann. 
N. H. (5) xii. Part i. Pseudo- Neuroptera, pp. 226-240. Part ii. 
Planipennia , and General Summary, pp. 298-303. 
Drawn up chiefly from materials collected by T. Blackburn. 23 species 
are noticed or described, 12 of which are Odonata. Three distinct faun- 
istic elements probably exist, viz : (1) the North American, represented 
by naturally or artificially introduced species; (2) the endemic, much 
the largest ; (3) the Australian, which is very slight so far as these 
insects are concerned. 
Packard, A. S., Jun. See Orthoptera. 
Scudder, Samuel H. The Carboniferous Hexapod Insects of Great 
Britain. Mem. Bost. Soc. iii. pp. 213-224, pi. xvii. 
An amplification of already-published notes [cf. Zool. Rec. xviii. Ins. 
pp. 12, 256, & 258], referring almost entirely to Neuroptera. Full de- 
scriptions and figures of Brodia prisco-tincta , pp. 213-217, pi. xvii. figs. 
3-7, Archceoptilus ingens , pp. 217 & 218, figs. 10-12, and Lithosialis bron- 
gniarti, pp. 221-223, figs. 1, 2, 8, & 9, are given. (The paper concludes 
with a list of Carboniferous British species, viz. : 4 Neuroptera , 2 Ortho- 
ptera , and 1 Coleoptera , p. 223.) 
. Notes on some of the Tertiary Neuroptera of Florissant, Colo- 
rado, and Green River, Wyoming Territory. P. Bost. Soc. xxi. 
pp. 407-409. 
A list of species in all families taken in Calabria in 1876 is given by 
A. Costa, Atti Acc. Nap. ix. pp. 52 & 53. 
A list of 50 species, of all divisions and families, found at Rouge- 
Cloitre, in Belgium, is given by A. De Bormans in C.R. ent. Belg. xxvii. 
pp. xxiii.-xxviii. 
In the “ Nat. Hist, of Hastings and Vicinity,” 1st Supplement (1883), 
is given a list of species of all families occurring in the district. 
