lord 
FALCONS. Si 
One near Norwich, August 1843: Stevenson, Birds of Nor- 
folk, i. p. 20. 
One in Sheffield Museum, said to have been killed in the 
neighbourhood: Heppenstall, Zoologist, 1843, p. 247. 
One, Cornwall, Feb. 1851: Bullmore, Cornish Fauna, p. 9. 
One, Rottingdean, Sussex, 1851: Sharpe & Dresser, Birds of 
Europe, part i. 
One, Buckingham, Jan. 1858: Clark Kennedy, Birds of 
Berks and Bucks, p. 162. 
One, out of six or seven seen near Somerleyton, Suffolk, 12th 
July, 1862: Stevenson, Birds of Norfolk, i. p. 20. 
One near Hythe, summer 1862; Hammond, Zoologist, 1862, 
p- 8192. 
One, mouth of the Humber, Nov. 1864: Boulton, Zoologist, 
1865, p. 94:15. 
One, Shrewsbury, no date given: Rocke, Zoologist, 1865, 
p- 9685. 
One, Leicester, Jan. 1866 : Widowson, The Field, 10th March, 
1866. 
One, Bridlington, Yorkshire, 6th July, 1865: hitherto un- 
recorded. 
One, Foveran, Aberdeen, May 1866: Gray, Birds of West of 
Scotland, p. 31. 
One, Helstone, Cornwall, autumn 1867: Bullmore, MS. 
One, Yarmouth, Norfolk, 16th May, 1868 : Stevenson, Zo- 
ologist, 1869, p. 1491. 
One near Wrexham, Denbighshire, May 1868: Kerrison, 
The Field, 23rd May 1868. 
One, Hauxley, Northumberland, Oct. 1868: Embleton, in 
Tate’s Hist. Alnwick, 1869. 
AMERICAN GOSHAWK. Astur atricapillus (Wilson). 
Hab. North America. 
One, Schehallion, Perthshire, spring 1869: R. Gray, The 
Ibis, 1870, p. 292. 
