88 EDWARD A. WILSON. 



than in any other. After keeping it with us day by day from New Zealand eastward 

 to 144 W. 55 S., we suddenly and completely lost it, nor did we see it again during 

 the remainder of that voyage. Its burrow, according to Mr. Eaton, is short and 

 generally excavated in Azorella ; it is as large as a rabbit's hole, dry, and with its 

 entrance bestrewn with green shoots of Accena. It breeds on the Kerguelen Islands. 



PAGODROMA NIVEA. 

 The Snowy Petrel. 



Procellaria nivea, Gmel. Syst. Nat. (1788), I., p. 562. 



Pagodroma nivea, Coues, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Philad. (1866), pp. 160, 171 ; Sharpe, Rep. ' Southern 

 Cross 'Coll. (1902), p. 148, ibique citata; Eagle Clarke, Birds of 8. Orkney Ids., Ibis, Jan. 190G, 

 p. 170, pi. iii., fig. 1 and xl. fig 1. 



MATERIAL IN THE ' DISCOVEBY ' COLLECTION. 



No. 11, ad. sk. ? . Larger variety. Feb. 26, 1904. Off Cape North. 



No. 12, ad. sk. $ . Larger variety. Jan. 1, 1902. Off Cape Adare. 



No. 13, ad. sk. $ . Smaller variety. Feb. 4, 1902. Off the Great Ice Barrier. 



No. 14, ad. sk. ? . Feb. 4, 1902. Off the Great Ice Barrier. 



No. 15, ad. sk. 9 . Smaller variety. Jan. 1, 1902. Pack ice, 68" S., 176 E. 



No. 16, ad. sk. $ . Smaller variety. Jan. 11, 1902. Off Cape Adare. 



No. 17, ad. sk. ? . Smaller variety. Jan. 11, 1902. Off Cape Adare. 



No. 18, ad. sk. $. Smaller variety. Jan. 31, 1902. Off the Great Ice Barrier, 76 S., 



207 17' E, 



No. 166, adult skeleton. Cape Adare. 

 The colouring of the soft parts is as follows : 



Bill, black with a bluish tinge on the sides, and flesh-coloured along the cutting edges and 

 at the gape. 



Iris, very dark brown. 



Legs and toes, webs, and claws all dark bluish black. 



MATEEIAL IN THE ' MORNING'S ' COLLECTION. 



No. 5, ad. sk. ? . Nov. 11, 1902. 68 S., 175 E. 



No. 14, ad. sk. $ . Ice pack. N. of Ross Sea. 



No. 2, ad. sk. 9 Ice pack. N. of Ross Sea. 



No. 15, ad. sk. $ . Ice pack. N. of Ross Sea. 



No. 2, ad. sk. ? . Nov. 28, 1902. 68 S., 175 26' E. 



THIS beautiful Petrel is more strictly confined to the limits of the ice than any 

 other. We first met with it in our short visit to the pack ice in S. lat. 61 to 62 

 and E. long. 140 on November 16th and 17th, 1901. But it was not until January 

 2nd, 1902 that we saw the bird in numbers, and then during the summer, cruising 

 along the coast of South Victoria Land and the Barrier to King Edward VII. 's Land, 

 it rarely failed to keep us company. Nothing could be more beautiful and less appa- 

 rently fitted for the rigours of a storm-ridden climate, such as the Antarctic, than this 

 little dove-like bird. It is the most constant companion of the ice, and whereas we saw 

 the Southern Fulmar (Priocella glacialoides) and the Antarctic Petrel ( Thallassoeca 



