Peckham — Revision ; of the Attidce of North America. 473 
others are pale with darker cloudings. In the male the legs 
and palpi are dark red, the latter with white hairs on the tar¬ 
sus, and the hairs on the upper surface of the cephalothorax are 
dark yellow, like those on the abdomen. Otherwise, it is ex¬ 
actly like the female. 
Hentz had one female from North Carolina. Mr. Banks has 
taken it at East Falls Church, Va., under pieces of wood, on 
ground; he has it also from Black Mts., FT. C. 
DENDRYPHANTES FURCATUS F. O. P. C. 1901. 
1901. Metaphidippus furcatus C., Biol. Cent. Am., Arachn., Aran., II, 
p. 267. 
Length, $ 4 mm. Legs S 1423. 
Since our specimen is rubbed bare we copy Cambridge’s color 
description, “Carapace red-brown, clothed with iridescent scales, 
without any marginal band, but with a median lateral band 
of white hairs on each side extending from beneath the small 
eyes almost to the posterior margin. Abdomen broWn, with 
iridescent scales,margined with a band of white hairs, unbroken 
in front; ventral area brown, margined with pale yellow. Legs 
yellow-brown, i and ii darker, unicolorous, iii and iv more 
or less annulated with darker brown.” The bifurcation of the 
palpal tube easily separates it from other species. 
Orizaba, Mexico (H. H. Smith) ; our collection, Arizona. 
DENDRYPHANTES FLA YUS P. 1888. 
Plate XXXVII, figs. 8—8a. Plate XXXVIII, fig. 1. 
1888. Dendryphantes flavus P. $, Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Let¬ 
ters, VII, N. A. Attidae, p. 39. 
$ Length, 6.2 mm. Legs 1432. Tinder the tibia of the 
second are one pair of spines, and two single spines, farther 
back; and there is one anterior lateral. 
The cephalothorax is brown, with black spots around the eyes, 
well covered with yellow hairs, which sometimes fade to white, 
