98 PACIFIC COAST AVIFAUNA No. 10 



1873. Coues, E. Some United States Birds, New to Science, and other things 



Ornithological. < American Naturalist, VII, 1873, pp. 321-331, figs. 65- 



70. 



Original descriptions of Peucaea carpalis and Harporhynchus bendirci, taken- near 

 Tucson. 



1874. Coues, E. Birds of the Northwest: A Hand-book of the Ornithology of 

 the Region Drained by the Missouri River and its Tributaries. ^Miscel- 

 laneous Publications No. 3. U. S. Geol. Surv. of the Terr. Washington : 1874, 

 8vo, pp. i-xi, 1-791. 



1874. Henshaw, H. \V. On a Hummingbird new to our Fauna, with certain 

 other facts ornithological. < American Naturalist, VIII, 1874, pp. 241-243. 



Eugenes fulgens taken at Camp Grant ; Centronyx Bairdi found abundantly in 

 southern Arizona in the fall. 



1874. Yarrow, H. C, and Henshaw, H. W. Report upon Ornithological Speci- 

 mens collected in the years 1871, 1872, and 1873. < Geog. Surv. West 100th 

 Merid. by George M. Wheeler, 1874, pp. 1-148. 



1874. Ridgway, R. Two Rare Owls from Arizona. < American Naturalist, 

 VII, 1874, pp. 239-240. 



Syrnium Occident ale ( = Strix occidentalis huachucae), the second known speci- 

 men, and Micrathene whitneyi ( = Micropallas whitneyi), the fourth known specimen. 



1875a. Henshaw, H. W. Annual Report Geol. Surv. West 100th Merid. by 

 George M. Wheeler. — Appendix LL of the Annual Report Chief of En- 

 gineers for 1875. 8vo., pp. i-iv, 1-196, pis. I-IX, maps, figs. > App. Ii, I2, 

 pp. 139-166. > "Notes upon the ornithology of the regions traversed", pp. 

 149-150; "'Annotated list of the birds of Arizona'', pp. 153-166. 



The list of the birds includes 294 species (erroneously numbered 291). Of these 

 twelve are now considered not to occur in Arizona, leaving 282 species, as compared 

 with 362 now accredited to the state. 



1875b. Henshaw, H. W. Report upon the Ornithological Collections made in 

 portions of Nevada, Utah, California, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona, 

 during the years 1871, 1872, 1873, and 1874. —Rep. Geog. Surv. West 

 100th Merid. by George M. Wheeler, 1875, vol. V, chapter III, pp. 120, 131- 



507, 977-989. P ls - !- xv - 

 1877. Lawrence, G. N. Note on Doricha enicura (I'icili). < Bull. Nuttall 

 Orn. Club, II, 1877, pp. 108-109. 



The specimen of hummingbird from Arizona recorded by Henshaw (1875a, p. 162) 

 as Doricha enicura proves to be a female of Calothorax lucifer. 



1877. Sharpe, R. B. Catalogue of the Passeriformes, or Perching Birds, in the 

 Collection of the British Museum. Coliomorphae, Containing the Families 

 Corvidae, Paradiseidae, Oriolidae, Dicruridae, and Prionopidae. =Cat. 

 Birds, III, 1877, pp. i-xiii, 1-343, pis. I-X1Y, many figs, in text. 



1878. Brewer, T. M. Notes on Junco caniceps and the Closely Allied Forms. 

 < Bull. Nuttall Orn. Club, III, 1878, pp. 72-ys. 



Contains descriptions of the eggs of Junco cinereus ( — Junco phaeonotus palliatus) 

 and Junco dorsalis ( = Junco phaeonotus dorsalis) from Arizona. 



