1072 EEPORT or STATE GEOLOGIST. 



15. Near Dublin Gap Springs, Pa., June 25, 1885, Prof. H. J. 

 Koddy. He says: "Saw one with family/ 7 



16. St. Helena Island, S. C., April 27, 1886, Walter Hoxie. Ee- 

 ports seeing others. 



17. Near Fort Meyer, Va., September 25, 1887, Wm. Palmer. 

 Another seen a week later. 



18. Ann Arbor, Mich., April or May, 1888, female, by Mr. Knapp. 



19. Chester, S. C., female, October 11, 1888, L. M. Loomis. 



aO. Near Minneapolis, Minn., May 13, 1892, male, H. M. Guilford. 



21. Wisconsin, Dr. P. E. Hoy. Eeported seen. 



22. Wabash, Ind., May 1, 1893, W. 0, Wallace. 



23. Wabash, Ind., May 7, 1895, W. 0. Wallace. 



In addition, it has been reported by Mr. C. S. Maynard, but I do not 

 have the references at hand. 



The winter home of this rare and narrowly restricted species is 

 apparently the Bahama Islands. It has been taken most commonly 

 during the spring migrations, near Cleveland, 0., and Ann Arbor, 

 Mich. It has never been taken in the interior of the United States 

 during the fall migrations. The summer home of this Warbler would 

 seem to be northern Michigan and Wisconsin, or north thereof, and 

 possibly in the mountains of Pennsylvania. The line of its spring 

 movements seems to be a narrow route from the Bahamas past the 

 western end of Lake Erie toward Lake Superior. Perhaps the return 

 migration may be over the same route, but it is possible this may 

 be, in the whole or in part, farther to the eastward, passing down the 

 coast after it reaches the Atlantic. 



Its distribution is very remarkable. Yet there seems to be an 

 effort on the part of other species to follow a line remarkably similar 

 to that noted. From the northwest into South Carolina, even to the 

 coast, there seems to be a migration route analogous to this. Along 

 it would seem to move, in a southeasterly migration, such forms as 

 Brewer's Blackbird, Yellow-headed Blackbird, Le Conte's Sparrow, 

 Prairie Horned Lark, typical plains forms. 



*277. (671) Dendroica vigorsii (Auo.). 



Pine Warbler. 

 Synonym, PENS-CREEPING WARBLER. 



Adult Male. Above, bright olive-green, more or less dulled by 

 ashy; wings and tail, grayish; two wing bars, whitish; stripe from bill 

 to eye and ring around eye, yellow; below, yellow, sides indistinctly 

 streaked with dusky; lower tail coverts and more or less of the belly, 



