HENDERSON é Ag i ee 
HARRINGTON: ETHNOZOOLOGY OF THE TEWA INDIANS 48 
the name P. megalonyx at Pueblo Creek. Probably also by McCall,' 
P. arcticus, at Santa Fe. 
2 
Zamelodia melanocephala (Swainson). Black-headed Grosbeak. 
A single pair raised a brood near camp at El Rito de los Frijoles 
2 
Passer domesticus (Linn.). English Sparrow. 
Introduced into the territory since 1886. Apt to be found now in 
all the more important towns, but probably not in the uninhabited 
canyon and mesa regions; certainly unknown to the ancient inhab- 
itants. 
2. 
Iridoprocne bicolor (Vieillot). Tree Swallow. 
Tachycineta thalassina lepida Mearns. Northern Violet-green 
Swallow. 
Several times birds of one or the other of these two species were 
seen at El Rito de los Frijoles, but we could seldom get a good view of 
them. Ourimpression is that the latter was represented, and probably 
both. The former was reported by McCall? as nesting at Santa Fe. 
2 
Dendroica auduboni auduboni (Townsend). Audubon’s Warbler. 
Common on August 20, 1910, at the foot of the Jemez Mountains, 
near the headwaters of El Rito de los Frijoles. 
| (pe tea 
Geothlypis trichas occidentalis Brewster. Western Y ellow-throat. 
Our Indian informants describe this species by its color, song, and 
habits, as a bird living along the Rio Grande in this region, and when 
shown a colored figure of it with pictures of other warblers they at 
once recognized it. 
Doubtless other species of the wood warbler family pass through 
in migration and probably some nest in this region, but no records 
are at hand. 
Juy. 
Mimus polyglottos leucopterus (Vigors). Western Mockingbird. 
Reported near San Ildefonso by one of our Indian informants, who 
seemed quite familiar with the bird, knew the white man’s name for 
it, and described its song as the song of all other birds combined. 
The whites report it at Santa Fe. 
ems ee 
Salpinctes obsoletus obsoletus [Say]. Rock Wren. 
1 McCall, George A., op. cit., p. 218. 2Tbid., p. 215. 
