;». TINAMOTIS. 0')i* 



rufescont : middle of the lower breast barred with whitish and ^^reyish 

 brown ; abdomen, flanks, and under tail-coverts uniform rufous- 

 cinnamon ; upper wing-coverts bluish grey, with irregular bar-like 

 rufescent marks ; primaries uniform brown on the inner web, with 

 pale rufescent marks on the outer web ; secondaries greyish brown, 

 the inner ones regularly barred with rufescent on both webs, the 

 outer ones only on the outer web, while the inner web is irregularly 

 freckled with rufescent ; under wing-coverts buff, irregularly barred 

 with brown, the last row uniform greyish ; tail-feathers olive, barred 

 with yellowish : bill brown ; iris chocolate ; legs whitish green ; 

 feet black. Total length about 18 inches, wing 10, tail 4-5, culmen 

 1-1, tarsus 1-9. 



Female. Similar to the male. 



Hah. Bolivia, X. Chili, Peru, and, according to Taczanowski, 

 also Ecuador. 



((. Ad. fek. [Chili] more probably Tapa- T. Bridges, Esq. [C.]. 



chilqua, Bolivia. 



h. Ad. sk. Chili, or more probably Zool. Soc. (Type of 



Bolivia {Pentland). species.) 



c. 2 ad.sk. Iluasro, Prov. of Tarapaca, II. Berkelev Jame3,Esq. 



Chili, Feb. [P.]. 



d, e. J 2 ad. sk. Sacaya, Chili, April. II. Berkeley James,Esq. 



[P.]. 

 f. <^ ad.sk. Canchosa, Chili, Jan. II. Berkeley James,Esq. 



[P.]. 

 ff. Ad. sk. Arequipa, S.^^'. Peru, July Salvin-Godman Coll. 



(H. Whitely). 



2. Tinamotis ingoufi. 



Tinamotia ingoufi, Oust. Ann. He. Nat., Zool. ix. p. 18 (1890) ; id. 

 Miss. Sc. Cap Horn, Ois. pp. lOo, 106, pi. 1 (Patagonia) (1891). 



Fei/tah (type). Very ditJercnt from T. pentlandi, and easily dis- 

 tinguishable by the quills being rufous-cinnamon, as in RhyncJiotus 

 rufesc-ens; primaries uniform, secondaries with black markings ; upper 

 parts and breast grey, but each feather brown in the middle and 

 with irregular /\-sliaped marks ; head with white and dusky stripes ; 

 throat white, sjiotted with dusky ; upper part of the head dusky, 

 bounded on the sides by two whitish bands, which join on the 

 occiput ; four white bands along the neck, two on each side ; a 

 band on the hind neck and one between the white ones on the 

 sides of the neck dusky ; lower breast white, with irregular crescent- 

 like dusky bands ; lower abdomen and under tail-coverts rufescent : 

 bill dusky olive ; feet plumbeous : iris yellow. Total length about 

 15'5 inches, wing 8, tail 2-75, culmen 1, tarsus l"2o. (Mas. Paris.) 



Hab. E. Patagonia, near Santa Cruz. 



