382 Miscellaneous. 
found in the Philippine Isles by Mr. Cuming (an indefatigable Fellow 
of this Society), and one, but a very small and badly-preserved one, 
was obtained on the voyage of H.M.S. Samarang, in Nangasaki Bay 
in the Eastern Seas. 
MISCELLANEOUS. 
GALLINAGO BREHMI. 
Two specimens of G. brehmi have been shot at Jardine Hall on the 
9th and 10th of October, being the first time that this species has 
been noticed as visiting our islands. We have no doubt that it has 
hitherto been overlooked, but one distinction is very easily noticed. 
On comparing the tail with that of the common snipe, it will be seen 
that the outline of the latter is rounded, while in G. brehmi the outer 
feather exceeds the length of the second. At this season of winter 
migration we would invite sportsmen to attend to the finding of this 
bird.—W. J. 
Jardine Hall, Oct. 11, 1849. 
MR. WILLIAM MACCALLA, 
It is too often our painful duty to record the loss of some natu- 
ralist who has shown himself well qualified to advance science, had 
he been spared to us, but who is called away in the prime of life. 
Such is now our position, since we have to announce the death of 
Mr. W. MacCalla, the well-known young Irish naturalist. We had 
the pleasure of forming an acquaintance with him many years since 
in his native district of Conamara in the county of Galway, and then 
recorded his promise of distinction in the journals of the day. At 
that time he had only commenced his career by making himself ac- 
quainted with the zoology and botany of that wild country, and we 
believe that his first discovery of note was the heath afterwards 
named, at the desire of Sir W. J. Hooker, Hrica Mackaiana, in com- 
pliment to our distinguished friend Dr. J. T. Mackay, who was, we 
believe, poor MacCalla’s first master in botany, and who had kindly 
encouraged him in his early and otherwise unassisted course of 
study. 
We cannot do better than by adopting the language concerning 
him of Dr. W.H. Harvey, who speaks of him as follows in his beau- 
tiful <Phycologia Britannica’ (cclxiii.) when describing an Alga 
(Enteromorpha Hopkirkii, MacCalla) named by him. His words 
are— 
“In now adopting Mr. MacCalla’s specific name I wish to record 
the regret I feel, in common with all naturalists acquainted with his 
merits, that death should so soon have closed a career which opened 
with so much promise of future fame. The readers of the ‘ Phyco- 
logia’’ must be well acquainted with the name of Mr. William Mac- 
Calla, in connection with the habitats of many of our rarest Alge. 
It is therefore almost superfluous to say that he was well acquainted 
with the species, and had a most acute eye to detect a minute spe- 
