TRINGA TEMMINCKI. 219 
Vadsé, including in all nine named 7. minuta. I have ventured to unite, as 
above, one from the first consignment to those from the second, feeling confident, 
from their strong likeness, that they must have belonged to the same nest, 
which was doubtless that of 7. temmiéncki. | 
§ 3992. Four.—Saarijairvi, West Finmark, 1855. 
Found and named Piko Liro by the lad Nalima’s Pekka. 
§ 3993. Four.—Kaaressuando, 1855. 
Out of seven, received on our way down the river. 
[Three others sold at Mr. Stevens’s, 7 March, 1856, to Messrs. Burney, 
Shepherd, and Troughton. | 
§ 3994. Three.-—Above Palojoki, 1855. 
Out of twelve from the [Norwegian ?] mountains or upper parts 
of the country, where the Palojoki people were fishing this summer. 
[Three of these are rather curiously rounded, and it is only by conjecture 
that Mr. Wolley put them together. Four others were sold at Mr. Stevens’s 
rooms, 7 March, 1856, to Messrs. Bond, Holland, Simpson, and Thurnell, while 
two more were given by me to Mr. Salvin in 1860. ] 
§ 3995. Four—Muonioniska, 1855. 
Brought at midsummer by Ada, the daughter of Priest Pfaler, who 
found them on the shore in front of the house. 
§ 3996. Four.—Lia, Muonioniska, 23 June, 1855. 
Found by Niemi’s Johan on the promontory, called Lia, between 
the lake and the river. They seem as if they had been exposed to 
water, a peculiarity which Ludwig observed when they were brought. 
The boy found four nests on this same day. 
§ 3997. Mour—Olasen-saari, 25 June, 1855. “ With bird. 
Lo MOKY 
[Though these eggs are carefully inscribed as above, they were never entered 
in the book. The island where they were found was a well-known haunt of 
this species (§§ 3978, 4004, 4005). | 
