452 THE DIVING ];IRDS— PYGOPODES. 



have been identicul with the form since described as Colymhus Adamsii. It is com- 

 mon in the northwestern parts of North America, and said to be also of occasional 

 occurrence in England, Asia, and perhaps elsewhere. We have no notes touching its 

 specific peculiarities ; and, indeed, it is not probable that these differ in any respect 

 from those of the common Loon. 



Mr. Bernard Ross mentions his luiving met with it in considerable numbers in 

 Great Slave Lake. ^Nlr. :\IaeFarlane found it breeding, and obtained two eggs and 

 several specimens of the bird, in the vicinity of Fort Anderson and on the shores of 

 the Arctic Ocean. Specimens were also taken by Mr. Ross at Fort Simpson, by Mr. 

 Clarke at F'ort Rae, by Mr. J. Reid on P.ig Island, and by Bischoft' at Kadiak. 



This Loon was found to be quite common at Fort Resolution, where several speci- 

 mens were obtained by Mr. Kennicott in the summer of 1860, as well as on the 

 Yukon Ilivi'r. :\Ir. 15. II. Ross secured specimens at Fort Norman and Fort Simpson. 

 It was obtained uu Teal's River by Mr. Gaudet, on Big Island by Mr. John Reid, 

 at Fort Rae by Mr. L. Clarke, at Fort Resolution by Mr. J. Lockhart, and on the 

 Anderson River and in its neighborhood generally by Mr. MacFarlane. 



3Ir. Whitely (" Ibis," 1867) and jMr. Swinhoe (" Ibis," 1867) speak of finding 

 this species common m the spring in Yezo. Mr. E. Adams — in lionor of whom this 

 species was named by J\lr. Gray — was present from October, 1850, to June, 1851, at 

 .Michalaski, Alaska, on the shores of Norton's Sound. In his notes on the birds then 

 and there observed (" Ibis," 1878), mention is made of what is presumed to be this 

 form, known to the natives as the Too-oo-dik. He did not see any himself, but he 

 was told that this bird did not arrive before the end of August. The natives had in 

 their possession plenty of skins, which they convert into bags for their tools. 



Urinator arcticus. 



THE ARCTIC LOON. 



Colymhus ardkus, Linx. S. N. I. ed. 10, 1758, 135 ; ed. 12, 1766, 221. — Rieii. & S\v. F. B. A. 11. 

 1831, 475. — NuTT. Mail. II. 1834, 517. — AuD. Oni. Biog. IV. 1838, 345 ; B. Am. VII. 1844, 

 29.5, pi. 477. — Lawi:. in Baird'.s B. N. Am. 1858, 888.— Bahid, Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, no. 699. 

 — CouEs, Pr. Ac. Nat. Sci. Philad. 1862, 228 ; Key, 1872, 334 ; Check List, 1873, no. 606 ; ed. 2, 

 1882, no. 842; Birds N. W. 1874, 721. — Ridgw. Noin. N. Am. B. 1881, no. 738. 



Urinator nrdicus, Ste.jn. Proc U. S. Nat. Mus. Vol. 5, 1882, 43. 



Colijmhiis macrorhynchos, Bueum, Vog. Deutsclil. 1831, 974. 



Colymhus mcgarhyndios, BiiiiiiM, Naum. V. 1855, 300. 



Colymhus ignotus, Bechst. Geinein. Naturg. Deutsclil. II. 1791, 782. 



Colymhus leuco2)us, Beciist. Naturg. IV. 1809, 625. 



IIai?. Northern part of northern licniisphere. In America, migrating south in winter, through 

 the Ea-stera Province, to the Northern United States. 



Sp. Char. Adult: Chin, throat, and foreneck velvety purplisli black, with a purplish Adolet 

 reflection, this black bounded sharply below, but on the sides of the head blending gradually into 

 the color of the cheeks and lores, which are smoky slate, this color gradually fading into a rather 

 light smoky cinereous, which occupies the wlnde upper [lartof the head and the entile nape ; across 

 the foreneck, just below the throat, a bar of white streaks ; on the sides of the neck, Ijetween the 

 purplish black of the foreneck and the ash of the nape, several longitudinal rows of black and 

 white streaks, the latter narrowest. Upper parts deep black, the upper part of the back with two 

 parallel longitudinal series of broad white bars, the inner scapulars with a single series of much 

 larger but otherwise similar bars, and the wing-coverts marked with small ovate spots of white. 

 Lower parts white, the sides of the jugulum streaked with black ; entire sides uniform intense 

 black. Dill black, the tip lighter ; iris bright carmine ; legs and feet "grayish blue, their inner 

 sides tinged with yellow ; claws black, that of the inner toe yellowish at the ba.se" (Audubon). 



