SANDPIPERS. 141 
One, Coatham, near Redear, Yorkshire, 17th Oct. 1853: 
Rudd, Naturalist, 1853, p. 275. 
One near Whitley, Northumberland, 27th June, 1855: Bold, 
Zoologist, 1855, p. 4808. 
One, Northumberland coast. Shot by Mr. W. Proctor, of 
Durham ; hitherto unrecorded. 
One, Caistor, near Yarmouth, 16th Sept. 1865: Stevenson, 
op._cit. 
One, Don Mouth, Aberdeen, 2nd Oct. 1867: R. Gray, Birds 
of the West of Scotland, p. 321. 
One, Terrington Marsh, near Lynn, 9th Jan. 1868: Steven- 
son, op. cit. 
Three, Scilly, Sept. 1870: Rodd, Zoologist, 1870, p. 2346 ; 
Mathew, Zoologist, 1872, p. 
One, Eastbourne, Sept. 1870: hitherto unrecorded. 
One, Thorpe Mere, Aldeburgh, Suffolk, 5th Oct. 1870: 
Hele, The Field, 15th Oct. 1870. 
A pair, Braunton Burrows, North Devon, 12th Sept. 1871: 
Rickards, Zoologist, 1871, p. 2808%. 
BROAD-BILLED SANDPIPER. Tringa platyrhyncha, 
Temminck. 
Hab. Northern Europe and Asia, migrating southwards 
on both continents for the winter. 
One, Breydon Harbour, Yarmouth, 25th May, 1836: Hoy, 
Mag. Nat. Hist. 1837, p. 116; Gurney, Zoologist, 1846, 
p- 13875; Yarrell, Hist. Brit. Birds, vol. i. p. 65 ; Steven- 
son, Birds of Norfolk, vol. ii. p. 360. 
* A bird killed near Ulceby, Lincolnshire, on the 12th Oct. 1863, 
was recorded as the Pectoral Sandpiper by the Rev. F. O. Morris in 
‘The Field’ of Nov. 7, 1863. I am informed, however, by Mr. J. 
Cordeaux, who shot it, that it was only an unusually small example 
of the Reeve, Machetes pugnax. 
