GOLIIN^. 
165 
Underside of the hindwing much darker green than in any European examples, 
although the tip of the apex of the forewing is brighter. Length of forewing 35 mm. 
= 1-| inches. Kashmir, 17,000 to 19,000 feet. August, 1902. 
Phicomone has up to now only been seen in the Alps, Pyrenees 
and Hungary, on this account the locality Kashmir is very interesting. 
We have not seen this form; the above is Fruhstorfer’s 
description; the block is from a figure he has kindly sent me. 
Elwes, in Iris, 1903, throws doubts on a form of Phicomone being 
found so far east as Kashmir, and suggests it may be a form of 
Cocandica, but the figure certainly much more nearly represents nuia. 
Phicomone , and it has no resemblance to Elwes’ C. Leechi which has been renamed 
Elwesi by Rober, the name Leechi being preoccupied in this genus. 
EURYMUS EOGENE. 
Plate 605, figs. 2, $, 2a, ? , 2b, $ , 2c, (dimorphic form). 
Colias Eogene, Felder, Reise Nov. Lep. ii. p. 196, pi. 17, fig. 7, $ (1865). Wallace, Trans. Ent. Soc. 
1867, p. 390. ErschofF, Lep. Turkistan, ii. (v.) p. 6 (1874). Elwes, Trans. Ent. Soc. 1880, 
p. 136 ; id. 1884, p. 13. Alpheraky, Stett. Ent. Zeit. 1883, p. 493. Grum-Grshimailo, Rom. 
Mem. Lep. iv. p. 329, pi. 5, figs, la, lb, lc, $ 9 (1890). Elwes, Journ. Bo. Nat. Hist. Soc. 
1898, p. 465. de Niceville, Report Pamir Boundary Com. Nat. Hist. Results, p. 16 (1898) ; 
id. Journ. Bo. Nati Hist. Soc. 1902, p. 249, pi. FF, fig. 12, 9* Leslie and Evans, Journ. Bo. 
Nat. Hist. Soc. 1903, p. 675. Bingham, Fauna of Brit. India, Butt, ii. p. 241 (1907). Verity, 
Rhop. Palearctica, p. 243, pi. 43, figs. 1 to 3, and pi. 44, fig. 1 (1909). 
Colias Myrmidone, var. Eogene, Keferstein, Verh. Zool. bot. Ges. Wien, 1883, p. 452. 
Imago. —Male. Rich orange-vermilion, veins prominent. Forewing with a 
patch of blue-grey scales on the lower base, some ochreous irrorations on the costa, a 
black, nearly linear spot closing the cell, a broad glazed black outer marginal band, 
nearly uniform in width from costa to lower margin, occupying more than a fourth of 
the wing, its inner edge irregular but almost evenly curved ; cilia crimson. Hindwing 
with more than the abdominal third covered with blue-grey scales, the outer border 
broad in its middle, narrowing upwards and hindwarcls and usually not reaching the 
anal angle ; cilia crimson and white. Underside. Forewing with its inner portion 
pale crimson, the costal and outer spaces greyish-green, the latter limited by a row of 
blackish spots, a brown, white-centred spot at the end of the cell. Hindwing greyish- 
green, a pinkish patch at the end of the cell, containing a small round white spot, a 
cliscal row of more or less obscure brown spots. Cilia of both wings crimson. 
Female. Dimorphic, in some examples coloured like the male, in others it is blue- 
grey. Upperside. Forewing with the veins always well marked, the cell spot large 
and pale-centred, the marginal band much broader than in the male, containing a row 
pale spots, varying in number, the basal third of the wing irrorated with blue-grey 
