HORN EXPEDITION-ARANEIDiE. 
345 
Locality. —Reedy Creek, George Gill Range. Previously recorded from 
Mudgee (New South Wales), Herbert Town (Queensland). 
Dolomedes a7tstraiianus, L. Koch. 
This is an extremely small specimen to have an epigyne apparently fully 
developed; but L. Koch mentions that his specimens vary remarkably in size and 
marking, and it seems to agree well with his description except in much smaller 
size and side sti-ipes on the cephalothorax not .so well marked. His were accus¬ 
tomed to live in and about water, which may account for the difference. 
Locality. —Reedy Creek, George (rill Range. Previously recorded from 
Woollongong, Sydney, Nepean River (New South Wales). 
Lycosa, Latr. 
Lycosa a 2 {rea, sp. n. (Fig. 13). 
Cephalothorax dark orange-yellow with yellowish-white hair ; eye-space black 
with white hair; maxilheand lips dull, I'ather dark, brown ; sternum brightoi’ange 
with white hair; mandibles black-brown with yellowish hair and brown bristles, 
a grey fringe on the outer falx edge; abdomen, upper .side golden yellow sprinkled 
with little black .spots, white hair; in front a blackish longitudinal stripe, sides 
paler yellow, hair white. Underneath yellow with transverse rows of stiff white 
hairs pointing liackwards. Palpi bright yellow with white hair. Tar.sal joint, grey 
hair and brown spines. Legs bright orange-yellow with white hair and grey 
spines. 
Cephalothorax 1), mm. longer than broad, as long as the patella and tibia IV., 
as broad ns tibia IV., slightly rounded at the sides, shiny, and clothed with 
down-lying hairs, which are rather stout; the middle ridge is prominent and the 
hind slope rather steep. 
Eyes. —The front row is slightly procuiwed ; the middle eyes being one-and-a- 
third times the diameter of the side eyes, all are equidistant, one-half the diameter 
of the side eyes apart and not so wide as the second row, from which the 
side eyes are rather farther apart than they are from the middle front. The eyes 
of the second row are large, three-fourths of their diameter apart and one-and-a- 
quarter of their diameter from the eyes of the third row. The third row of eyes 
is two-thirds the diameter of the second row and two of their diameters from 
one another, 
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