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BLACK GUILLEMOT. 
COMMON SCRABER. TYSTE. SPOTTED GUILLEMOT. 
GREENLAND DOVE. 
Uria grylle, PENNANT. MonraGu. 
‘6 minor, STEPHENS, 
Cephus grylle, FLEMING. 
Uria—A bird supposed to be the Guiliemot. Grylle. Grulle— 
A groaning sound. 
THIs species is found in Europe—in Iceland, Norway, Den- 
mark, Sweden, Nova Zembla, the Ferroe Islands, Spitzbergen, 
and occasionally in Holland and France. In America it 
appertains to Greenland and Melville Island, and along the 
continent occurs about Labrador, Baffin’s Bay, and Hudson’s 
Bay, and so on to the United Shes. Maryland, and other 
parts. 
They have been seen on the shores of Dorsetshire, Hamp- 
shire, Devonshire, Durham, Northumberland, the Fern Islands 
in former years, though their visits there now would seem to 
be ‘few and far between,’ and other parts of the country. 
These birds are obtained on the Yorkshire coast, but not 
plentifully; about the year 1816, Arthur Strickland, Esq. shot 
one out of a small flock in the height of the breeding-season, 
near the rocks off Flamborough Head. In Cornwall, the 
bird has occurred at Gwyllyn Vase, but is rare. 
The Black Guillemot is a permanent resident at Iona; it 
also occurs throughout the year in different parts of Scotland, 
as on Handa, in Sutherlandshire, Inchkeith, and the Isle of 
May. “in Orkney it is very abundant, and a constant in- 
habitant; as likewise in the Hebrides and the Shetland 
Islands. 
In Ireland, too, it is common, and in the Isle of Man. 
