364 BIRDS OF NORFOLK. 
had in his possession two other Yarmouth specimens— 
one killed in May and the other in September. 
1847. May 14th. One killed at Yarmouth, as noticed 
by Messrs. Gurney and Fisher in the “ Zoologist”’ (p. 
1785).* 
1850. August 20th. One adult and one immature 
specimen, in the “ Dennis collection,” at Bury, were 
killed at Yarmouth. 
1851. October 2nd. One from Yarmouth. 
1853. May 16th. Two in a state of half change 
from winter to summer plumage. One of these is in Mr. 
J. H. Gurney’s and the other in my own collection. I 
have also another Yarmouth specimen killed somewhere 
about this date. 
1861. May 23rd. One at Yarmouth, also purchased 
by Mr. Gurney, which, from its late appearance, had 
nearly completed its breeding plumage. Another was 
shot about the same time on Breydon by Captain Longe, 
who has it preserved in his collection at Yarmouth. 
November 23rd. A third example in this year was 
also killed on Breydon, and is in the possession of the 
Rev. C. J. Lucas, of Burgh. 
1862. Captain Longe informs me that he saw three 
or four specimens during May and June, killed in the 
marshes around Breydon; and one in his own possession 
was shot on the 19th of August, on Breydon muds. 
The Rey. C. J. Lucas has also one killed on Breydon, in 
this year, on the 16th of May, far advanced in summer 
plumage. 
1866.¢ May. A specimen killed at Yarmouth during 
* In the “Zoologist” for 1849 (p. 2623), Mr. F. W. Foster, of 
the Wisbech Museum, records a Temminck’s stint as “shot on the 
banks of the river, less than a mile below the town,’ which he 
preserved for the museum. <A pigmy curlew and little stint were 
killed at the same time. 
+ Mr. Hele, of Aldeburgh, on the Suffolk coast, has recorded in 
