399 I 



quill and tail-feathers are dusky, and in both 

 the outermost feather only has a white exte- 

 rior margin. The coverts of the tail are of 

 a pale ferruginous colour, and two of them 

 are nearly as long as the tail itself. The sca- 

 pulars are ferruginous ; in the male, the head 

 and whole back have a tinge of the same co- 

 lour, marked with dusky streaks ; in the fe- 

 male, the back is grey, and the dusky stripes 

 of a darker hue. The crown of the head is 

 black in the male, dusky in the female ; the 

 forehead is yellow, the bill and feet are black, 

 the belly of a dirty reddish white. These 

 larks are migratory, they visit the environs 

 of Albany Fort in the beginning of May, 

 but go further northward to breed : they feed 

 on grass-seeds, and buds of the sprig-birch ; 

 run into small holes, and keep close to the 

 ground, from whence the natives give them 

 the name of Chi-chup-pi-stie. 



9. Turdus. )2i. Migratorius, 292. 6. American 

 Thrush. I Fieldfare. Kalm II. p. 90. Faun. Am. 

 Sept. II. Catesby I. 29. 



Severn River, N° 59. Albany Fort, 7, 8, 9. 



The descriptions of these birds in various authors 

 coincide with the specimens ; at Severn River 

 they appear at the beginning of May, and 

 leave the environs before the frost sets in. 

 At Moose Fort, in the north latitude 51°. 

 they build their nest, lay their eggs, and hatch 

 their young in the space of fourteen days ; 

 but at York fort and Severn settlement this is 



done 

 ( 19 ) 



