1883 
<i. W. AX I) E. (i. 1’ECKH AM. 
10 
behind. The dorsal is as large as the lateral eye, and is on a line with 
it; the small median eve is just above their upper borders, and is 
slightly nearer the lateral eye. The anterior row of eyes is slightly 
curved, a straight line from the top of the middle eyes cutting the 
upper borders of the lateral eyes. They are all well separated, the 
lateral eyes the more widely. The middle are twice as large as the 
lateral eyes. The clypeus is one-half as wide as the middle eyes. It 
is vertical, and is clothed with dense white hairs. 
The palpi are rufous, with white hairs. 
The falees are short, stout, and vertical. In color they are iri- 
descent green. 
The maxilla' are thick, stout and rounded. In color they are 
reddish, tipped with white. 
The relative length of the legs is 4, 1, 3, ± The first pair is the 
stoutest, the second next. In color they are distinctly reddish, grow- 
ing darker toward the extremities, with whitish hairs. There are 
spines on the femoral, tibial and metatarsal joints of the four pairs, 
those on the metatarsi of the fourth extending to the base. 
The sternum is rounded: black, with white hairs. 
The abdomen is rather pointed. It is black, covered with coarse 
tawny hairs, with which a few gray hairs are intermixed. These gray 
hairs predominate around the base, giving that region a whitish ap- 
pearance, and are a little thicker on either side of the middle point of 
the abdomen, making two grayish spots. 
The venter is blackish, with coarse gray hairs. 
The epigynum presents a rounded plate with a large square open- 
ing at the posterior edge. The curved tubes are visible through the 
skin in the anterior half. 
Habitat, Pennsylvania. 
XV. Attus quAOHiuNEATUs, new. 
( Plate II, Figure 15.) 
FEMALE— Length, 5.3 mm.: width of abdomen, 3 nun.; length of ceph.th., 2 mm. ; width 
of ceph.th., 1.5 mm. 
Legs. 
Fein. 
Pat. 
Til). 
Metat. 
Tar. 
Total. 
1 . 
1.2 
.8 
.8 
.4 
.2 
3.4 
2. 
1 . 
.5 
.5 
.2 
.2 
2.4 
3. 
1 . 
.3 
.5 
.2 
.2 
2.2 
*1. 
1.2 
.5 
1 . 
' .8 
.4 
3.9 
I he cephalothorax is low and lint ; the thoracic part is longer than 
the cephalic. The eye region is black, covered with yellowish hair : 
the thoracic region is brownish testaceous, with sparse yellowish hair 
The lower narrow margin is black. 
The quadrangle of the eyes is wider than long, and wider behind. 
The dorsal eye is as large as the lateral, and is prominent ; it is so 
