298 Brim.Ey, Migration at Raleigh, N. C. ane 
July 
Spring Migration Autumn Migration 
Year Arrivals Lasts Total Arrivals Lasts Total 
1894 61 13 74 29 21 50 
1895 42 27 69 Sil 1 32 
1896 50 0 50 1 0 il 
1897 50 0 50 5 0 5 
1898 57 2 59 24 2 26 
1899 39 0 39 15 1 69 
1900 58 6 64 5 4 1 
1901 41 0 41 —_— — a 
1902 17 2 19 — — = 
1903 35 0 35 = — — 
1904 34 1 35 = — — 
1905 28 2 30 15 0 15 
1906 i 14 AT 11 0 11 
1907 54 16 70 17 19 36 
1908 49 0 49 24 28 52 
1909 55 18 73 — —_ — 
1910 11 0 i! — — —_— 
1911 45 13 58 11 2 13 
1912 52 13 65 == aS = 
1913 12 0) 12 — — = 
1914 35 6 41 3 0 3 
1915 68 18 86 6 2 8 
1916 56 19 US (not included) 
The preceding table contains the number of species observed in 
each year by my brother H. H. Brimley and myself up to about 
1892, and from that time to 1916 by myself alone in most years, 
except that in the spring migration, Mr. 8. C. Bruner’s records 
constitute the greater part of the data for “arrivals” in 1908, 1912 
and 1915, and more or less of the data for the same in 1907, 1911, 
and 1913, while he also gave me some autumn records in 1908. 
Mr. Z. P. Metcalf assisted me very considerably in the spring of 
1911, and he and his assistants at the A. and M. College contributed 
about one half the data for the spring of 1916. Mr. Franklin 
Sherman and my brother have also contributed much data from 
time to time. 
The autumn data, and the “lasts” of winter birds are almost 
exclusively my own, or in the earlier years mine and my brother’s, 
but Mr. Bruner furnished a number of interesting “lasts” for the 
spring of 1915. 
