from Mount Dulit, in N. W. Borneo. 431 



this Journal, will have prepared the minds of ornithologists 

 for further discoveries in other high mountains of Borneo. 

 That veteran traveller, Mr. A. H. Everett, has already 

 proved, by the small collection made by him on Mount Pen- 

 risen, that the species of birds procured by Mr. Whitehead on 

 Kina Balu are not all peculiar to that mountain, and now we 

 know that some of them are to be met with in other localities. 

 As will be seen by the present paper, several of the novelties 

 obtained by Mr. Whitehead are also found on Mount Dulit, 

 and for this interesting disclosure science is indebted to the 

 enterprise of a young Englishman, Mr. Charles Hose, who is 

 already known for his collecting work on the Baram River, 

 where he discovered the remarkable new species of Semno- 

 pithecus which bears his name. The exact position of Mount 

 Dulit does not seem to be marked in any Atlas to which I have 

 had access, but Mr. Hose speaks of it as being situated at the 

 head of the Baram River, and Mr. Whitehead tells me that 

 the chain of which Dulit is one of the peaks was visible to 

 him from the heights of Kina Balu. It is not a little re- 

 markable that some of the Kina-Balu species have recently 

 been obtained by Signor Modigliani in high Sumatra 

 (c/. Salvadori, Ann. Mus. Civic. Genov. (2) xii. pp. 40-78). 

 To this paper I refer in the following pages, and I have 

 also quoted Mr. Everett's 'List of Bornean Birds,' and my 

 own essays on the avifauna of Kina Balu. For the sake of 

 convenience of comparison I have followed the order of 

 Mr. Everett's list of Bornean Birds (Journ. Straits Branch 

 Asiat. Soc. 1889, p. 91). 



Fam. TuRDiDiE. 



1. Geocichla everetti, 



Geocichla everetti, Sharpe, antea, p. 323. 



No. 22. ? . Dulit, 5000 feet, October. 



The specimen is unfortunately not quite adult, but nearly 

 so, and I have Mr. Seebohm's authority for saying that it 

 undoubtedly belongs to a species new to science. It seems 

 to have no very near ally, for though it has the underparts 

 somewhat resembling those of G. cyanonota, the brown colour 



