BIRDS—PROCELLARINAE—PUFFINUS CINEREUS. 835 
PUFFINUS OBSCURUS, Latham. 
The Dusky Shearwater. 
Proceliaria obscura, Gm. Syst, Nat. I, 1788, 559. 
Puffinus obscurus, Latu. Ind. Orn. II, 1790, 828.—Bonap. Syn. 1828, No. 313.—Is. Consp. II, 1856, 204.—Nurtr. 
Man. II, 1835, 337.—Auvup. Orn. Biog. Ill, 1835, 620.—Is. Birds Am. VII, 1844, 216; pl. cecelviii. 
&¢ Puffinus Vherminieri, Lesson.” 
Sp. Cu.—Upper part of head, back, and wings, black ; tail black ; under plumage white ; bill light blue, black at the end ; 
iris bluish black ; outside of tarsus and toes bluish black, inside and webs pale yellowish flesh color ; claws black. Length, 11 
inches ; wing, 73; bill, 12,3; tarsus, 1}. 
Hab.—Southern coast of the United States ; Gulf of Mexico, 
Specimen in Museum of Lyceum of Natural History, New York. 
In color it much resembles P. anglorum, but its very sma!l size will distinguish it from that 
and the other American species. 
Adamastor, Bonap. 
PUFFINUS CINEREUS, Gmelin. 
The Cinereous Petrel. 
Procellaria cinerea, Gm. Syst. Nat. I, 1788, 563. 
Procellavia melanura, Bonn. Encyc. Meth. 
Procellaria hesitata, Forsr. Descr. An. Licht. 1844. 
“¢ Procellaria hesitata, Kunu.’? Gould B. of Aust. pl. xlvii. 
Puffinus hesitata, Lawr. Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. N. Y. VI, 1853, 5. 
Adamastor typus, Bon. Cons. Ay. II, 1855, 187, 
Sp. Cu.—Sides of the head and entire upper plumage plumbeous gray, rather darker on the head ; wing coverts dark bluish 
ash, (in my specimen margined with umber brown ;) primaries grayish black on the outer webs and ends of the inner ; rest of 
the inner webs light brownish ash, becoming whitish at the base ; secondaries and tertiaries brownish ash ; inner lining of wings 
and axillary feathers ashy brown; tail brownish black ; throat and sides of the neck pale cinereous ; under plumage white ; 
lower tail coverts ashy brown; upper mandible black along the ridge, the sides and hooked end yellowish white ; under 
mandible dusky yellow, with the lateral grooves black ; tarsi and feet yellow, with the exception of the hind part of the tarsi 
and outer toes, which are brown; claws yellow with dusky tips; a short and strong spur in place of the hind toe. Rather more 
robust in form than the other species of Puffinus ; bill also stronger, tail rounded, the two central feathers a little projecting. 
Length of skin, 19 inches; wing, 13}; bill, 2}; tail, 5; tarsus, 24 outer toe and claw, 3. 
Hab.—Pacific ocean, off the California coast. 
When I described this species in the Annals Lyc. Nat. Hist., referred to above, I was at a 
loss for its true specific name, and do not feel fully assured that I am right in now aflixing to it 
Gmelin’s name of cinereus. 
Mr. Gould states that it is very similar to cinereus, and Mr. Newton (Zoologist, 1852) 
considers Mr. Gould’s hesitata to be Gmelin’s species. Bonaparte has made it the type of a 
new genus, viz: Adamastor, and in Cons. Avium names it 4. typus. In the same work, under 
Puffinus kuhlit, Boie,’’ he says that Proc. cinerea, Gm., is certainly the same as his Adam. 
typus ; if such be the fact, Gmelin’s name must be restored; and if it does not belong in 
