OSTEOLOGY OF BIRDS 36/ 



152 An Arrangement of the Families and the Higher Groups of 



Birds. Am. Nat. Bost. Nov.-Dec. 1904. v. 38, nos. 455- 

 56,' p. 833-56. Figures 1-6 in text. 



153 The StarHng. (Stitrnus vulgaris). The Warbler. 2d sen 



Floral Park, N. Y. ist quarter, 1905. v. i, no. i, p. 20-24. 

 I cut. 



154 Deformed Bill in Partridge. Western Field. San Francisco, 



Cal. Dec. 1906. v. 9, no. 5, p. 839. i cut. 



155 On the Osteology of the Tubinares. Am. Nat. Bost. Feb. 



1907. V. 41, no. 482, p. 109-24. 2 cuts in text. 



156 Polygamy and Other Modes of Mating among Birds. Am. 



Nat. Bost. Mar. 1907. v. 41, no. 483, p. 161-75. 



157 Notes on the Broad-winged Hawk. The Wilson Bui. Ober- 



lin, O. June 1907. n. s. v. 14, no. 2, p. 59-62. i cut. 



158 P'light of Archaeopteryx. Discovery. New York. Sept. 1907. 



V. I, no. 5, p. 114. 



159 Osteological and Other Notes on Sarcops calvus of the Phil- 



ippines. Philippine Jour. Sci. Sec. A. Manila, P. I. Oct 

 1907. V. 2, no. 5, p. 257-69, pi. I. 



160 On the Comparative Osteology of the Passerine Bird 



Arachnothera magna. [Read at the Zool. Soc. of Lond. 

 Tuesday evening, Apr. 2y, 1909]^ 



^ As this bulletin goes to press I desire to express my thanks here to Dr Charles W. 

 Richmond of the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. for his kindness in fur- 

 nishing me with such changes in the nomenclature of American birds as will appear ia 

 the new forthcoming edition of the A. O. U. Check-List, thus supplying data otherwise 

 inaccessible to me at the time. r. w. s. 



