KATURAL HISTORY. 
ed through a microfcope, to nearly a chcf- 
nut-colour. The bread is a glittering, and 
appears with dark down, intei-fperled with 
fome black hairs. The female is black, and 
marked with fpots of a deeper die, occafioned 
by a velvet down, lying in tufts, which are 
only to be diflinguilhed by the glafs. 
The larvae are found in the trunks of 
decayed trees, where they are transformed 
into perfetf infefts, which flutter upon llow- 
ers, wander over fields, and conceal themfclves 
in thickets, or under the bark of trees. 
Gtnus XXII. 
Cl C I N D E L A. 
Chanrder. 
T HE horns are briflly ; the jaws porrcft. 
X ed, and armed with teeth ; the eves are 
pronunent ; and the breaft is rather round, 
;inU margined. 
S 
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CICfN- 
