224 APPENDIX. 



DAI.GLEISH, JOHN J. 



Notes on a Collection of Birds and Eggs from Central Uruguay. Proc. Roy. 

 Phys. Soc. Edinburgh, vi. p. 232, and viii. p. 77. 



[The collections described by Mr. Dalgleish were formed by a corre- 

 spondent in the district of San Jorge, in the province of Durazno, 

 Uruguay. The specimens sent along with the eggs were determined by 

 Messrs. Sclater and Salvin.] 



DARWIN, CHARLES. 



Zoology of the Voyage of the ' Beagle ' during the years 1832-6. Part III. 

 Birds. By John Gould, Esq., F.L.S. London, 1841. 



Darwin, when Naturalist to the ' Beagle,* during her voyage round 

 the world in 1832-6, made good collections of birds on the Rio de 

 la Plata and along the shores of Patagonia. Most of his specimens, 

 originally deposited in the Zoological Society's Museum, are now in the 

 British Museum, but some of them unfortunately are in a very imper- 

 fect condition. His valuable notes were published in the work of which 

 the title is above given. They relate to about 80 species of Argentine 

 Birds. The specimens were determined and the new species described 

 by Gould; but Gould's MS. was afterwards revised for publication by 

 G. R. Gray, on account of Gould's absence in Australia. 



Darwin's ' Naturalist's Voyage,' originally published as a volume of 

 the Narrative of the ' Voyage of the Beagle/ also contains many ex- 

 cellent notes on the life and habits of Argentine Birds. 



DOERING, ADOLF. 



Informe Oficial de la Comision Cientifica agregada al estado mayor general 

 de la Expedicion al Rio Negro (Patagonia). Realizada en los meses de 

 Abril, Mayo y Junio de 1879, bajo las ordenes del General D. Julio A. 

 Roca. Entrega I. Zoologia. Buenos Aires, 1881. 



Dr. Adolf Doering, of the Argentine University of Cordoba, has 

 been a zealous collector and observer of the birds of the Republic (see 

 under Cabanis and Sclater). The zoological portion of his report upon 

 the Rio Negro expedition of 1879 gives a list of the birds, which con- 

 tains 110 species, most of them well-known Patagonian forms. 



DURNFORD, HENRY. 



Henry Durnford,, a member of the British Ornithologists' Union, 

 whose early decease was a severe loss to ornithological science, was a 

 constant worker on birds from the time of his arrival in Buenos Ayres 

 in 1875 until his death in 1878. The birds collected by Durnford are 

 now mostly in the British Museum. His published papers on this 



