CLANGULA GLAUCION. 617 
§ 5847. Mive-—Kaaressuando, 1854. 
Out of twenty, all more or less blown except three. One has very 
remarkable tracings at the larger end of what I suppose to be natural 
markings. I have seen something like it in other Ducks’ eggs. 
§ 5848. One—RMarkina, 3 June, 1854. 
Remarkably small, but I found one only half its length in a 
Sotka’s nest, and undoubtedly laid by that bird. The other two in 
the nest were of the usual size. 
[It measures 1:96 by 1°33 inch. ] 
§ 5849. Hleven—Lake Enuara, 14 June, 1855. “Bird 
caught.” 
There were fifteen in this ¢yl/la. A Lapp whom I set to work to— 
find eggs brought me these with their mother, which he had killed 
on the nest, according to the custom of the district. He gave asa 
reason that it made no difference in the numbers. 
_ § 5850. Oxe.—Kuttainen, 1855. 
A dwarf egg found by Jatko’s Johan in a ftyl/a with others. 
[It measures 1°33 by 1:23 inch. | 
§ 5851. HMour.—Muonioniska, 1855. 
I chose these as fine-coloured eggs from some dozens of eggs in 
Forsstrém’s store—given up with reluctance by the old grand- ~ 
mother. 
[Three more were sold at Mr. Stevens’s, 7 March, 1856, to Messrs. Sealy, 
Thurnall, and Troughton. | 
§ 5852. Zen.—Junki-rowa, 3 June, 1857. 
These (fourteen) Golden-eye’s in a dead pine trunk in Junki-rowa 
on the slope of Ollas-tunturi, a quarter of a mile Swedish from any 
lake or river, Kalki-muka being the nearest. It was in a Palokirki 
[Black Woodpecker]’s hole (kérritn rdkasi) and they saw down in 
the hole. The bird did not leave when the tree was struck by an 
