244 PROCEEDINGS OF UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. [Ici85. 



Cones, p. 210, met with it on two occasions ; one at Groswater Bay on 

 Angast 3, and on the 25th of Augnst at Henley Harbor. 



420. Tinnunculus sparverius (Lixx.). Sparroiv Hmck. [13.] 

 Cones, p. 216, saw a single individual in Labrador. 



_-r 425. Pandionhaliaetuscarolinensis(GM.). American Osprcy ; Fisli EaivTc. [44.]** 



Mr. John Ford assured me that the Fish Hawk breeds, four or five 

 pairs of them, about 4 miles above the station of the Hudson Bay Com- 

 pany on Northwest Eiver. 



Is^uttall, page 81, reports it from Labrador. 



Brewster, p. 382, records that few were seen at Anticosti. 



430. Circus hudsonius (LiNX.). Marsh Eawlc. [38.] 

 Audubon, vol. i, p. 105, saw it in Labrador. 



432. Accipiter fuscus (Gmel.). Sharp-shbuied Hawk, [l^.] 



Eichardson, vol. ii, p. 44, states that one was killed near Moose Fac- 

 tory and deposited by the Hudson Bay Company in the museum of 

 Loudon 



Verrill, p. 137, reports having seen this species near Salmon Eiver, 

 July 3, 1861. 



-^433. Astur atricapillus (WiLS.). American Goshawk. [14.]* ** 



Eesident in Ungava district. Winter specimen obtained in early De- 

 cember, 1882. Breeds at the "Chapel" near Fort Chimo. Specimen 

 obtained from Eigolet. Known as " Partridge Hawk." 



'r443. Buteo pennsylvanicus (WiLS.). Broad-ninged Haivk. [27.] 



S[)ecimen (No. 33209 S ) in Smithsonian Institution collected by 

 James McKenzie in 1862 at Moose Factory. 



4-447. Archibuteo lagopus sancti-johannis (Gmel.). American Eough-legged Hawk. 

 [30, 31.] ** 



Both light and dark phases,- with their eggs, young, and adults, col- 

 lected at Fort Chimo. Apparently more abundant on eastern and 

 northern shores than on the southern portions of Labrador. Downy 

 young were also obtained, of the black phase, July 17, 1882, at Davis 

 Inlet. Termed " Squalling Hawk" by the planters. 



-^ 449. Aquila chrysaetus canadensis (Lixx.). Golden Eagle. [39.]** 



Specimens procured in Ungava district. Breeds in the northeastern 

 portions among the hills. A i)air also breed at the "Forks" in the 

 Ungava district. The Eagles are termed " Grepe " by the planters, and 

 is a word derived from some of the earlier Scandinavian settlers on the 

 coast who apply the term Grepe to a Vulture. 



451. Haliaeetus leucocephalus (Lixx.). Bald Eagle; Gray Eagle. [41,43.]** 



Nuttall, p. 75, states it as breeding and rearing their young in all the 

 intermediate space from Nova Scotia or Labrador to the shores of the 

 Gulf of Mexico. 



