194 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts , and Letters. 
eyes relatively much larger, and close together, instead of sepa¬ 
rated, with the middle less than twice as large as the lateral. 
In Cosmophasis, moreover, the dorsal eyes are smaller than the 
lateral and form a row plainly narrower than the caphalothorax, 
which widens out below'. 
Almota Quinii sp. nov. 
Plate XX, figs. 1-le. 
$. Length 3.5 mm. Legs 4132, first a little the stoutest. 
This species; has; the body and the palpi dark, while the legs 
are pale. Our specimen has been rubbed. The cephalothorax 
seems to have been covered with short yellow hairs excepting 
on the face, under the lateral eyes, where the hairs are white. 
The abdomen is cylindrical, and has a wide band of yellow 
hairs down the middle and a wide black region on each side. 
The whole seems to have been, covered with silvery iridescent 
scales, which extend on to the venter. The palpi are black 
with white hairs. The legs are pale yellow, the first pair hav¬ 
ing a smoky brown band underneath the; femur and along the 
outer side of the patella, tibia, and metatarsus. The falces are 
small, and are pale brown in color. 
We have one male from Cape Colony, Africa. 
Cyllobelus australis sp. nov. 
Plate XXI, figs. 2, 2a. 
The abdomen is dark, prettily marked with white dots and 
lines. 
$. Length 5 mm. Legs 4132, first pair somewhat stouter 
than the others,. The fourth exceeds the third by the; tarsus 
and nearly all of the metatarsus. 
The cephalothorax is moderately high, and is narrow in front, 
widening from the second row of eyes to a point a little in 
front, of the posterior end, and well behind the dorsal eyes. 
The cephalic part is but slightly inclined, while the thoracic 
falls in a rounded slope from the third row of eyes. The quad- 
