Anthela rubriscripta

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Anthela rubriscripta
Scientific classification
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A. rubriscripta
Binomial name
Anthela rubriscripta
(T. P. Lucas, 1891)
Synonyms
  • Darala rubriscriptaT. P. Lucas, 1891

Anthela rubriscripta is a moth of the family Anthelidae first described by Thomas Pennington Lucas in 1891. It is found in Australia. [1]

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<i>Anthela</i>

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Anthela connexa is a moth of the Anthelidae family. It is found in Australia.

Anthela ekeikei is a moth of the Anthelidae family. It is found in New Guinea

Anthela exoleta is a moth of the family Anthelidae first described by Charles Swinhoe in 1892. It is found in Australia.

Anthela inconstans is a moth of the Anthelidae family. It is found in New Guinea.

Anthela limonea is a moth of the Anthelidae family. It is found in Australia.

Anthela linearis is a moth of the family Anthelidae first described by Thomas Pennington Lucas in 1891. It is found in Australia.

Anthela maculosa is a moth of the Anthelidae family. It is found in Australia.

Anthela trisecta is a moth of the family Anthelidae first described by Thomas Pennington Lucas in 1898. It is found in Australia.

The Diocese of Mackenzie River was a short-lived diocese of the Ecclesiastical Province of Rupert's Land of the Anglican Church of Canada.

Anthela or Anthele was a town and polis (city-state) of Malis in Ancient Thessaly. Herodotus places the town between the small river Phoenix and Thermopylae which was a celebrated pass between Thessaly and Phocis. He also mentions that the Thessalian Asopus river passed through its surroundings and that there was a sanctuary of Demeter, a place where the Amphictyonic League celebrated its meetings and a temple of Amphictyon. According to legend, the league was founded, in part, to protect the temple of Demeter at Anthela. Anthela is in the immediate vicinity of the pass of Thermopylae, celebrated for the temples of Amphictyon and of the Amphictyonic Demeter, containing seats for the members of the Amphicytonic council, who held here their autumnal meetings. At Anthela, Mount Oeta recedes a little from the sea, leaving a plain a little more than half a mile in breadth, but again contracts near Alpeni, the first town of the Locrians, where the space is again only sufficient for a single carriage. Modern scholars identify its location with the modern village of Anthili in the municipality of Lamia.

References

  1. Savela, Markku. "?Anthela rubriscripta (Lucas, 1891)". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved November 4, 2018.