﻿Mount 
  Dulit 
  and 
  the 
  Baram 
  District. 
  383 
  

  

  finished, 
  and 
  I 
  hope 
  on 
  my 
  return 
  to 
  explore 
  the 
  other 
  parts 
  

   of 
  tlie 
  mountain. 
  For 
  that 
  reason 
  I 
  have 
  not 
  at 
  present 
  

   attempted 
  a 
  comparison 
  of 
  the 
  avifauna 
  of 
  Dulit 
  with 
  that 
  

   of 
  Kina 
  Balu, 
  as 
  given 
  by 
  Di'. 
  Bowdler 
  Sharpe 
  in 
  'The 
  Ibis' 
  

   for 
  July 
  1890. 
  All 
  one 
  can 
  say 
  at 
  present 
  is 
  that 
  many 
  

   species 
  appear 
  to 
  range 
  higher 
  on 
  Dulit 
  than 
  they 
  do 
  on 
  

   Kina 
  Balu, 
  tlie 
  avifauna 
  of 
  vrhich 
  was 
  so 
  thoroughly 
  studied 
  

   by 
  my 
  friend 
  Mr. 
  Whitehead. 
  

  

  I 
  have 
  given 
  references 
  to 
  Dr. 
  Sharpens 
  papers 
  on 
  the 
  birds 
  

   of 
  Dulit, 
  and 
  in 
  the 
  order 
  of 
  classification 
  I 
  have 
  followed 
  

   Mr. 
  Everett's 
  useful 
  list 
  of 
  Bornean 
  birds 
  in 
  the 
  ' 
  Journal 
  of 
  

   the 
  Straits 
  Branch 
  of 
  the 
  Asiatic 
  Society 
  ' 
  for 
  1889. 
  

  

  Family 
  Turdid.e. 
  

  

  1. 
  Geocichla 
  everetti. 
  

  

  Geocichla 
  everetti, 
  Sharpe, 
  Ibis, 
  1892, 
  pp. 
  323, 
  431. 
  

   Discovered 
  on 
  my 
  first 
  expedition 
  to 
  the 
  mountain. 
  It 
  

   lives 
  in 
  the 
  damp 
  moss-covered 
  top 
  of 
  Dulit. 
  

  

  2. 
  Ekithacus 
  cyane. 
  

  

  Erythacus 
  cyaneus 
  (Pall.) 
  ; 
  Everett, 
  t. 
  c. 
  p. 
  98 
  ; 
  Sharpe, 
  

   Ibis, 
  1892, 
  p. 
  432. 
  

  

  This 
  is 
  a 
  bird 
  of 
  the 
  low 
  country, 
  and 
  is 
  not 
  found 
  at 
  any 
  

   great 
  height 
  on 
  the 
  mountain. 
  

  

  3. 
  Myiophoneus 
  borneensis. 
  

  

  Myiophoneus 
  borneensis, 
  Slater 
  ; 
  Everett, 
  t. 
  c. 
  p. 
  98 
  ; 
  

   Sharpe, 
  Ibis, 
  1892, 
  p. 
  432. 
  

  

  This 
  Whistling 
  Thrush 
  occurs 
  from 
  3000 
  to 
  5000 
  feet 
  

   on 
  Dulit. 
  I 
  also 
  found 
  it 
  breeding, 
  the 
  nest 
  being 
  placed 
  

   on 
  a 
  stump; 
  there 
  were 
  two 
  young 
  birds 
  in 
  the 
  nest, 
  one 
  of 
  

   which 
  my 
  Dyak 
  hunter 
  ate, 
  and 
  the 
  other 
  is 
  now 
  in 
  the 
  

   British 
  Museum. 
  It 
  is 
  one 
  of 
  the 
  few 
  Bornean 
  birds 
  which 
  

   are 
  good 
  whistlers. 
  Native 
  name 
  '^Blankin." 
  

  

  4. 
  COPSYCHUS 
  MUSICUS. 
  

  

  Copsychus 
  musicus 
  (Raffl.) 
  ; 
  Sharpe, 
  Cat. 
  B. 
  vii. 
  p. 
  65; 
  

   Everett, 
  t. 
  c. 
  p. 
  99. 
  

  

  Found 
  on 
  the 
  lower 
  portions 
  of 
  the 
  mountain 
  and 
  on 
  

  

  