Il4 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF CANADA. 
taken at Point Barrow were of this species. They are not at all 
common, but are occasionally met with during the spring migra- 
tions. (Murdoch. A winter resident on the coast of British 
Columbia. Tolerably abundant. During some winters large 
numbers congregate off the mouth of Fraser River. (Fannin.) 
The rarest of the geese in the Fraser valley. (Brooks.) Havea 
specimen shot at Calgary, Alberta, in the spring of 1893. (Dzppie.) 
BREEDING Notes.—These birds seek a nesting-ground along 
the course of the Lower Anderson River and the neighbouring 
region along the arctic coast. (/Velson.) The Eskimos assured 
us that large numbers of “‘ White Waveys” annually breed on the 
shores and islands of Esquimaux Lake and Liverpool Bay, but 
strange to say we never observed any on the Barren Grounds 
proper or on the shores of Franklin Bay. The Eskimos 
brought in to Fort Anderson about one hundred eggs, which 
they claimed to have discovered among the marshy flats and 
sandy islets on the coasts of Esquimaux Lake. Macfarlane.) 
MUSEUM SPECIMEN. 
One fine specimen, shot at Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, April 
28th, 1897. 
1692. Greater Snow Goose. 
Chen hyperborea nivalis (Forst.) Ripew. 1884. 
A few young birds are taken occasionally in Greenland, in 
Newfoundland and Nova Scotia; accidental in New Brunswick. 
The same may be said of its occurrence in Quebec and Ontario. 
A very abundant migrant in Manitoba and eastern Assiniboia 
in the spring. In the autumn it migrates farther west and goes 
south, chiefly through Alberta and western Assiniboia. 
BREEDING Notes.—The remarks made by me under Chen hyper- 
dorea belong in part to this species, as at the time the eggs were 
collected the forms were not separated. (Macfarlane.) Breeding 
in immense numbers in the Barren Grounds along the arctic 
coast. (Rzchardson.) 
MUSEUM SPECIMENS. 
One specimen, shot on Black Island, Lake Winnipeg, by Mr. 
J. B. Tyrrell. A set of three eggs taken on one of the Twin 
Islands, James Bay in 1898, received from Mr. A. P. Low. 
