8 ORIOLIDA —LANIID 
58. ANTHUS CERVINUS (Pall.). Red-throated Pipit. 
One was seen near Kilnsea some years since with the chestnut- 
vinous breast, but not obtained. It it more than probable that it occurs 
occasionally in the autumn in the immature plumage, and is over-looked, 
for at this season it is most difficult to diagnose either the adult female 
or the young. 
59. ANTHUS CAMPESTRIS (Linn.). Tawny Pupit. 
November 20th, 1869, one, a male, was shot by Mr. Thomas 
Boynton on the sand hills near Bridlington, and is now in his collection 
[‘ Zool.,’ 1870, pp. 2021, 2068, 2100]. 
60. ANTHUS RICHARDI, Vieill. Richard's Pipit. 
October 12th, 1887, one in company with larks, Tetney Haven, 
Lincolnshire coast [‘ Zool.,’ 1888, p. 62]. 
61. AnTHUS spIPOLETTA (Linn.). Water Pipit. 
April 5th, 1895, an adult female shot by Mr. G. H. Caton Haigh at 
Tetney, on the Lincolnshire coast [‘ Nat.,’ 1895, p. 179] [‘ Saunders’ 
Manual,’ 2nd ed., p. 141]. 
62. AnTHUS opscuRUS (Latham). Rock Pipit. 
Resident all the year round, and nesting in numbers on the rocky 
portions of the coast and particularly abundant at Flamborough Head. 
Frequents the flat coasts of Lincolnshire and Holderness in the winter 
and the shores of the Humber, and I have met with it inland on ‘‘ beck”’ 
and drain banks. 
63. AnTHUS RUPESTRIS, Nilsson. Scandinavian Rock Pipit. 
Appears as common as the preceding on the Holderness and Lincoln- 
shire coasts in the autumn when on migration. 
Family ORIOLIDA. 
64. ORIOLUS GALBULA, Linn. Golden Oriole. 
About half-a-dozen occurrences since 1834. In 1871 a pair are 
reported as commencing a nest in a garden at West Raventhorpe, near 
Brigg. 
Family LANIIDA. 
65. Lanius ExcuBIToR, Linn. Great Grey Shrike. 
A regular autumn immigrant into the coast districts in October to 
the middle of November. On October 15th, 1892, an extraordinary 
number in the Spurn district. Are seen near the east coast again 
occasionally from the middle of February to April, the latest May 3rd. 
On February 17th, in 1881, six together near the Spurn Lighthouse. 
66. Lantus MAgor (Pallas). Pallas’s Great Grey Shrike. 
This form, with only one white bar on the wing, is quite as frequently 
met with in the autumn as the preceding. 
67. Lanius coLtuurio, Linn. Red-backed Shrike. 
Very occasionally on migration in May, also in August. There are 
four well-authenticated instances of its nesting, in East Yorkshire, near 
Beverley, and in 1894 Easington, and in Lincolnshire in the parishes of 
Hibaldstow and Raventhorpe. 
