196 
CATALOGUE OF 
Country unknown. 
27. Azelina? Atrapesaria. 
Mas. Cinereo-fusca ; palpi vix rohusti ; antenna simplices, vix 
pubescentes ; pedes sat graciles ; alee latiuscnlce , fimbria 
rufescente-ferruginea ; anticce subfaleatee , lineis duabus nigri- 
cantibus , 1 a valde undulata postice obsoleta , 2 a obliqua vix 
undalata extus concisa intus diffusa , margine exteriore bian- 
gulato ; posticce denticulatce , linea obliqua recta pallido mar - 
ginata, punctis tribus marginalibus posticis. 
Male. Cinereous-brown. Palpi hardly stout; third joint 
very minute. Antennae simple, hardly pubescent. Legs rather 
slender; spurs long. Wings rather broad ; fringe reddish ferrugi- 
nous. Fore wings subfalcate, with two blackish lines ; interior line 
very undulating, obsolete bindward ; exterior line oblique, slightly 
undulating, very concise on the outer side, diffuse on the inner side ; 
exterior border forming two very slight angles. Hind wings denti- 
culated, with a slender straight oblique line, which is pale-bordered 
exteriorly ; exterior border with three black points hindward. 
Length of the body 6 lines ; of the wings 15 lines. 
a. ? 
Genus 37. SYNEMIA. 
Corpus valde robustum. Frons squamosa, non fasciculata. 
Palpi breves, crassi ; articulus 3us conicus, distinctus. Antennae 
maris pubescentes, feeminae setaceae. Thorax quadratus, latus, an- 
tice fasciculatus. Abdomen crassum, maris fasciculo apicali 
quadrato. Pedes validi ; femora lata ; tibiae non incrassatae ; tarsi 
subspinosi. Alae densae, dentatae ; anticae margine exteriore inciso. 
Pergama, Herr.-Sch . 
Synemia, Guen. Phal. i. 163. 
Body very robust. Front squamous, not tufted. Palpi short, 
thick ; second joint oval ; third conical, distinct. Antennae pubes- 
cent in the male, setaceous in the female. Thorax quadrate, broad, 
tufted in front. Abdomen thick, with a quadrate tip in the male. 
Legs stout ; femora broad ; tibiae not incrassated ; tarsi slightly 
spinose. Wings thick, dentated. Fore wings with a deep notch on 
the exterior border. 
