55(5 NORTH AMERICAN FAUNA. [no. 27. 



Series of 61 Plates, from photographs taken by Tyrrell during the 

 expedition, occupy pp. 207 to 329 of this part, being separated from the 

 text. 



This is a general report of a route explored in 1000 between Great 

 Slave Lake and Hudson Bay, by way of Artillery Lake, Hanbury and 

 Thelon rivers, and Chesterfield Inlet. Many notes on natural history, 

 especially relating to the larger mammals, are found in the report. 

 These notes are partially summarized on pp. 121 and 122. 



There is another edition, published as a separate, apparently identi- 

 cal in matter, but with pages numbered 1 to 62, and with the addition 

 of Appendix No. 5. — List of Plants, by Prof. John Macoun. In this 

 edition the plates, numbered and paged as in the original, are bound 

 with the text, which they follow. 



1902. Whiteaves, J. F. Note on the Nesting of the Northern Raven (Corvus 



corax principalis) in Canada. <Ottawa Naturalist, XVI, p. 86. 

 June, 1902. 



Mention made of five " raven's eggs, found on Artillery Lake May 

 24, 1900, by C. Fairchild." 



1903. Allen, J. A. Mammals Collected in Alaska and Northern British Co- 



lumbia by the Andrew J. Stone Expedition of 1902. <Bull. Am. 

 Mus. Nat. Hist.. XIX, pp. 521-567. October 10, 1903. 



Several species of small mammals recorded from Fort Liard, Fort 

 Norman, and other points in Mackenzie. 

 1903. [Canadian Government.1 Summary of Reports on the Peace River and 

 its Tributaries by Surveyors of the Department of the Interior and 

 Geological Survey Department between the years 1884 and 1902. 

 8vo, pp. 1-7, Government Printing Bureau, Ottawa. 



Contains brief extracts from various reports (some unpublished) 

 relating to the region. A few notes on the fauna are included. 



1903. Hanbury, David T. Through the Barren Ground of North-Eastern 



Canada to the Arctic Coast. <The Geographical Journal, XXI, 

 pp. 178-191. 



A short account of a journey in Northern Canada in 1901-2. A 

 few notes on the fauna are given. 



1904. Hanbury, David T. Sport and Travel in the Northland of Canada. In- 



cludes appendices on Geology, Rock Specimens, Lepidoptera, Flora, 

 Measurements of Eskimo, Eskimo vocabulary, etc. 8vo, pp. 319, with 

 illustrations and maps. London and New York. 



Narrative of journeys made in northern Canada in 1898, 1899, 1901, 

 and 1902. A great many notes on natural history are given. 

 1904. Raine, Walter. Discovery of the eggs of Solitary Sandpiper. <Ottawa 

 Naturalist, XVIII, pp. 135-138. October, 1904. 



Account of discovery of three sets of eggs of this species in northern 

 [now central 1 Alberta in 1903 and 1904. 

 1904. Schalow, Herman. Die Vogel der Arktis. Fauna Arctica. Eine Zusain- 

 menstellung der arktischen Tierformen, mit besonderer Berticksichli- 

 gung des Spitzbergen-Gebietes auf Grund der Er.iiebnisse der Deutchen 

 Expedition in das Nordliche Eismeer im Jahre 1898. Band IV, Lie- 

 ferung I. pp. 81 288. Jena. 



Gives notes on 270 species and subspecies, the annotations relating 

 chiefly to distribution. Contains ornithological bibliography, and dis- 

 cussion of fauna of various parts of" region. 



