848 



REVIEW OP AMERICAN BIRDS. 



< I T^.jj --I 



[part I. 



ably: from .45-. 75 of an inch. With the specimens before me I 

 am unable to see any essential difl'ereuce between easiern and 

 western specimens. 



A young bird from Fort Simpson is not materially different from 

 the adult, exhibiting no trace of the spots of immature Turdidee 

 and SylmcoUdse. 



I am now inclined to consider the specimen upon which Vireo 

 cassini was based to be only a dull-plumagcd, winter skin of V. 

 solitaria, with the under parts tinged with brownish-buff, and the 

 olive shades obscured. I have never seen a specimen killed in 

 eastern North America having this coloration, nor even making a 

 decided approximation to it, but I can find no tangible characteristic 

 of external form to distinguish them. 



(6,822.) Iris hazel. (10,229.) Type of V. casaini. 



in-*- 



VireosylTia propinqiia. 



Vireosj/lvia propinqua, Baibd, n. sp. 

 Hah. Coban, Guatemala. 



(No. 20,402.) Top and sides of the head bluish-ash ; aline from bill to eye, 

 eyelids and under parts, including vent and crissum, white. Upper parts 

 olive green, this color extending on the sides of the neck as far as the ear 

 coverts. Throat and breast tinged with yellowish, deepest on the lateral 

 portion. Two white bands on the wing. Bill and legs plumbeous. Quills 

 and rectrices as in solitaria. 



First or spurious primary very small, scarcely .30 of an inch ; 2J quill 

 equal to the 5th ; the 3d longest. 



(No. 20,402.) Total length, 5.10; wing, 3 00 ; tail, 2.35 ; expo.sed portion 

 of Ist primary, .20, of 2d, 2.18, of longest, 3d (measured from exposed base 

 of 1st primary), 2.30 ; length of bill frojn forehead, .(jO, from nostril, .31, along 

 gape, .66 ; tarsus, .72 ; middle toe and claw, .(;3 ; hind toe and claw, .47. 



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