166 RARE VISITANTS. 
A pair near Leeds: Gould, Birds of Great Britain. 
One, Somersetshire: Baker, Somerset. Archzeol. Proc. p. 146. 
Three seen, Firth of Forth, 5th May, 1853; Colquhoun, 
Sporting Days, pp. 20, 21; The Ibis,:1867, p. 239; Gray, 
Birds of West of Scotland, p. 399. 
Two, Sheerness, March 1870: Mathew, Zoologist, 1870, 
p. 2182. 
Fam. ALCID SZ. 
BRUNNICH’S GUILLEMOT. Uria arra (Pallas)*. 
Hab. Northern Europe, Asia, and America. 
One or more, coast of Kerry, July 1833: Sabine, in Ains- 
worth’s Descr. Caves of Ballybunian, Kerry; Thompson, 
Nat. Hist. Irel. (Birds), vol. 11. p. 213. 
One, Youghal, Ist Feb. 1850: Thompson, op. cit. 
One, Caithness: Wilson, Voyage round Scotland and the 
Isles, vol. i. p. 179; Gray, Birds of West of Scotland, 
p- 422. In the collection of Mr. Sinclair. 
Several, Unst, Shetland: Macgillivray (fide Sir J. Ross), 
Hist. Brit. Birds, vol. v. p. 316; Baikie and Heddle, 
Hist. Nat. Orcadensis, p. 86; Crotch, Zoologist, 1861, 
p- 7343F. 
Several, Orkney: Macgillivray, op. cit.; Baikie and Heddle, 
op. cit.; R. Gray, op. cit. 
One, Sutherlandshire: Sir W. Milner, List of Birds of Suther- 
landshire: A. G. More, Ibis, 1865, p. 449. 
* Cepphus arra, Pallas, Zoograph. Rosso-Asiat. 1. p. 847 (1811), 
Uria briinnichiz, Sabine, Trans. Linn. Soe. xii. p. 538 (1818). 
+ In a list of the birds of Shetland (Zoologist, 1861, p. 7343), 
Mr. Crotch includes Briinnich’s Guillemot as ‘ permanent.” At 
p. 7707 of the same volume, however, he says :-—“ Briimnnich’s Guil- 
lemot we could never see or hear of.” 
