. The annals and magazine of natural history : zoology, botany, and geology . doboj in name given by Heer is preoccupied by Fabricius, so theCroatian fossil may be called Cercopis (?) heerij n. n. Ihefctssil now de:?cribed is dedicated to the author who tirstreported a Cercopid from the Gurnet Bay depo^^it, though heerroneously recorded it as the modern Triec2)hora sanguino-Ulitiij whicii, according to Van Duzee, is the type of Cerco^Hs. 100 On Fossil Arthropods in the British Museum. FulgoridsB (sens. lat.). HoOLEYAj gen. nov. Represented by an imperfect teginen, showing the follo


. The annals and magazine of natural history : zoology, botany, and geology . doboj in name given by Heer is preoccupied by Fabricius, so theCroatian fossil may be called Cercopis (?) heerij n. n. Ihefctssil now de:?cribed is dedicated to the author who tirstreported a Cercopid from the Gurnet Bay depo^^it, though heerroneously recorded it as the modern Triec2)hora sanguino-Ulitiij whicii, according to Van Duzee, is the type of Cerco^Hs. 100 On Fossil Arthropods in the British Museum. FulgoridsB (sens. lat.). HoOLEYAj gen. nov. Represented by an imperfect teginen, showing the followingcliaracters :—Broad, with costal margin straight except atbase ; a distinct costal vein ; subcosta united with radius forsome distance, separating at a very acute angle^ and givingotiat least six nearly parallel brandies to costa; media witiiall four branches separate ; ?»4 joined by a cross-vein toupper branch of cubitus. Hooleya indecisa, sp. n. (Fig. 2.) Length of fragment (base to sixth branch of subcosta)8 mm. ; dark fuscous throughout, with dark veins. Fig. Hooleya indecisa, sp. u. Oligocene of Gurnet Bay, Isle of Wight, 1886 (Hooley,1145). Mr. F. Muir, the well-known specialist in this group, wasgood enough to examine my drawing, and suggests that theinsect may fall in the Derbidas, perhaps near to Nesokaha,Muir. The genus Nesokaha was based on a species fromCeram, but others occur in the Pliilippines, and there is onein Formosa. I had inter[)reted the insect as a member ofthe Cixiidse, and Mr. Muir considers tliis possible. InTillyards fossil there are similar obliquebranches to the costa, but these are considered to come fromthe first division of the radius, the subcosta being supposedlyabsent. 1^1 r. II. E. AiKlrcwes on Oriental CarabitUu. ]C,i IIastites, gen. nov. Tognien elongjite; subcosta united with radius for most ofits length, terniiiinting in two branches on costa ; radiussimple ; media straight, not forked until far beyond middleof t


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdec, booksubjectnaturalhistory, bookyear1838