Smithsonian miscellaneous collections . he banks of the Rappahannock some 15 miles below Rapidan-Rappahannock area, therefore, must have been tra-versed, if not occupied, by the makers of this highly specialized formof point. Other objects of stone were necessarily made and usedduring the same period, and possibly some of the oldest of the num-erous flaked implements were the work of the makers of the Folsompoints; however, that is another question that remains to be answered. Thus it is evident that the country beyond the falls of the Rappa-hannock, the Rapidan-Rappahannock


Smithsonian miscellaneous collections . he banks of the Rappahannock some 15 miles below Rapidan-Rappahannock area, therefore, must have been tra-versed, if not occupied, by the makers of this highly specialized formof point. Other objects of stone were necessarily made and usedduring the same period, and possibly some of the oldest of the num-erous flaked implements were the work of the makers of the Folsompoints; however, that is another question that remains to be answered. Thus it is evident that the country beyond the falls of the Rappa-hannock, the Rapidan-Rappahannock area, has been occupied orfrequented by man through the centuries, but floods and other forcesof nature have so changed the surface of the narrow valleys thatscant traces of the native camps and villages remain. SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOLUME 94, NUMBER 9 ZIbonias Xincoln Case^ jfunb REVIEW OF THE GENUS CHLAENOBIA BLANCHARD (COLEOPTERA : SCARABAEIDAE) BYEDWARD A. GHAPIN Curator, Division of Insects, U. S. National Museum. Publication 3338] CITY OF WASHINGTON PUBLISHED BY THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION SEPTEMBER 23, 1935 BALTIMORE, UB., V. 8. A. Ilbomas Xincoln Case^ 3Fun^ REVIEW OF THE GEXUS CHLAENOBIA BLANCHARD(COLEOPTERA: SCARABAEIDAE) By EDWARD A. CHAPIN Curator, Division of Insects, U. S. Natioiial Mitscion The tribe Rhizotrogini of the scarabaeid subfamily Melolonthinaeis represented in the New World by about 450 known species, dis-tributed among what are usually considered as five genera. Somewhatmore than three-fourths of these species are assigned to PhyllophagaHarris (Lachiiostcnia Hope). One species is the sole member of thegenus Chirodincs Bates. Listrochelus Blanchard and PJiytalus Erich-son together number about 100 species. Clilacnobia Blanchard, asdefined in the present paper, contains 15 named forms, of which 2are given but subspecific rank. In describing CJilacnobia, Blanchard allied it to certain generawhich are grouped about Macrodactylus Latreill


Size: 1591px × 1570px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorsm, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectscience