Peckham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 495 
on the sides. The underside is covered with white hairs. The 
first leg is shaped as in the male, hut the color is brown with a 
dark band running along the outer side, and a similar band on 
the inner side of tibia and patella. The leg is covered with 
short scale-like white hairs, and has a row of black hairs above, 
and some long, soft, white hairs beneath. The other legs are 
lighter brown with dark bands on the sides and many long black 
and white hairs. The palpus is light brown covered with 
white hairs, and having a bunch of black hairs under the tarsus. 
Mr. Banks has this species from Arizona (Williams), and we 
have several specimens from Austin, Texas. 
PSEUDICIUS SITICULOSUS n. sp. 
Plate XXXIX, figs. 11—11a. 
$ . Length 7 mm. Legs, 1423, first pair with femur patella 
and tibia much enlarged. Tibia of first, with three pairs of 
spines, those of the anterior much shorter than those of the pos¬ 
terior row; tibia of second with two fine, small spines, one at 
each end; metatarsi of first and second with two pairs. 
This spider seems to belong to the genus Pseudicius in spite 
of the fact that it has six spines under the tibia, of the first leg. 
Our specimen is rubbed. 
The cephalothorax is brown, darkest in the eye-region, and 
seems to have been covered with white hairs. The abdomen is 
reddish-brown, this color being broken, on the dorsum, into four 
pairs of somewhat quadrate spots by a median, branching, white 
band. The sides are covered with white hairs. The under¬ 
parts are light. The legs and palpi are light yellow. 
We have a single female from Owen’s Lake, California. 
ICIUSi E. S. 1874. 
Type, Iceltjs notabilis C. K. 
1845. Attus H., (elegans $, superciliosus <$), Jour. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. 
y. 
1846. Iceltjs C. K., (notabilis), Arachn., XIII, p. 174. 
1848. Maevia C. K., (cristata <£), Arachn., XIV, p. 70. 
