130 TRAVELS OF A NATURALIST 



Green Sandpiper (T. ochropus). 



Wood Sandpiper (T. glareola). 



Terek Sandpiper (Terekia cinerea) . 



Whimbrel (Numenius phceopus) . 



Little Gull (Larus minutus). 



Bed-throated Diver (Colymbus septentrionalis) . 



Black-throated Diver (C. arcticus). 



My good friend Mr. H. E. Dresser, whose advice and 

 whose suggestions innumerable have always been of great 

 service to us, noted for us also : 



Lapp Owl (Strix lapponica). 



Ural Owl (S. uralensis). 



Snowy Owl (Nyctea scandiaca). 



Tengmalm's Owl (Nyctala tengmalmi). 



Pigmy Owl (Glaucidium passerinum) . 



Siberian Titmouse (Parus cinctus). 



Azure Titmouse (P. cyanus). 



Wax wing (Ampelis garrulus). 



Eversmann's Warbler (Phylloscopus borealis). 



And probably other Asiatic warblers, as the Booted 

 Warbler (Hipolais caligata), and perhaps the Dusky 

 Thrush (Turdus dubius = T. fuscatus), and other eastern 

 forms ; also the Yellow-browed Bunting (Emberiza 

 chrysophrys) and the Lapland Bunting (Cakarius lap- 

 ponicus) . 



Mr. Dresser also noted the Jack Snipe (Gallinago galli- 

 nula} as almost certain to occur, but in the result we did 

 not meet with it at all. 



He also furnished us with notes from the proof-sheets 

 of Meves' paper as to the occurrence of the Large-billed 

 Willow Warbler* (Phylloscopus, or Calamolierpe-magniros- 

 tris), the Lanceolated Warbler (Locustella lanceolata), 



>' This warbler has since proved to be Blyth's Eeed-Warbler 

 (Acrocephalus dumetorum). 



