ANIMAL SANCTUARIES IN LABRADOR 495 



Bibliography 



General information is given in Labrador; its Discovery, Exploration and 

 Development, by IV. G. Gosling : Toronto, Musson. The Atlantic Labrador is 

 dealt with by competent experts in Labrador : the Country and the People, by W. T. 

 Gre?ifell and Others: New York, The Macmillan Company, 1910. This has several 

 valuable chapters on the fauna. The Peninsula generally, the interior especially 

 and the fauna incidentally, are dealt with in the reports of A. P. Low and D.I. V. 

 Eaton to the Geological Survey of Canada, 1893-4-5. An excellent general paper on 

 the country is The Labrador Peninsula, by Robert Bell, in The Scottish Geographical 

 Magazine for July, 1895. The N. of the S.W. part is more particularly described 

 in his Recent Explorations to the South of Hudson Bay in The Geographical Journal 

 for July 1897. The Quebec Labrador is the subject of a recent Provincial report, 

 La Cote Nord du Saint- Laurent et le Labrador Canadien, par Eugene Rouillard: 

 Quebec, 1908 — Afinistere de la Colonisation, des Mines et des Pecheries. An excellent 

 account of animal life on the W. half of the Quebec Labrador is to be found in 

 Life and Sport o?i the North Shore, by Napoleon A. Comeau : Quebec, 1909. The 

 zoology of the Mammals, though not particularly in their Labrador habitat, is to 

 be found in Life- Histories of Northern Mammals, by Ernest Thompson-Seton : 

 London, Constable, 2 Vols., 1910. The birds, similarly, in the Catalogue of Canadian 

 Birds, by John Macoun and James M. Macoun : Ottawa, Government Printing 

 Bureau, 1909. Some books about adjacent areas may be profitably consulted, like 

 Newfoundland and its Untrodden Ways, by John Guille Millais, and American 

 official publications, like the Birds of Netu York, by Eton Howard Eaton: Albany, 

 University of the State of New York, 1910. No. 34 of the New York Zoological 

 Society Bulletin, for June 1909, is a " Wild-life Preservation Number." The best 

 general history and present-day summary of the world's fur trade is to be found 

 in a recent German work, a genuine Urquellengeschichte. French and English 

 translations will presumably appear in due course. The statistical tables are 

 wonderfully complete. The illustrations are the least satisfactory feature. This 

 book is — A us dem Reiche der Pelze, vo?i Emil Brass : Berlin, im Verlage der 

 Neuen Pelzwareji-Zeitung, 191 1. 



