CAPERCAILLIE—CARRION. 41 
one sent by the laird of Glenorchy to Charles IJ. at Perth, 
‘**who accepted it weel as a raretie, for he had never seen 
any of them.” As regards the date of its former extinction 
in Scotland, Pennant records in his first tour in Scotland 
in 1769, having himself seen a cock-bird, and this seems the 
latest actual record, although of course the bird doubtless 
lingered a few years later. As regards Ireland, Rutty 
records it in co. Leitrim in 1710 and Pennant says it was 
to be found in co. Tipperary as late as 1760. Willughby 
in 1678 calls it ‘“‘ Cock of the Wood” only, and speaks of 
it as found in Ireland, but does not refer to it as a Scottish 
species. The name in Welsh is Ceiliog coed, an equivalent 
of Cock of the Wood. 
CapERLINTY : The WHITETHROAT. (Jedburgh.) 
CapER-LoneTAIL: The LONG-TAILED TITMOUSE. 
CaprpED Buzzarp: The HONEY-BUZZARD. Montagu gives 
it as a provincial name. 
CAPPED PETREL [No. 331]. A species thought now to be 
extinct. 
CaPpuL corte. A Gaelic name for the CAPERCAILLIE (q.v.). 
Car Crow: The CARRION-CROW. (Craven, Yorkshire.) 
CaRFIL BACH: The LITTLE AUK. (North Wales) lit. 
* Little auk.” 
CaRNER Crow or CARENER Crow: The CARRION-CROW. 
(Norfolk.) 
CAROLINA CRAKE [No. 456]. A North American species, 
named by Linneus Rallus carolinus, whence its popular 
name. 
CarotinaA Cuckoo: The YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO 
(Jenyns.) 
CARPENTER-BIRD : The GREAT TITMOUSE. (Provincial.) 
Carr-Crow: The BLACK TERN (see Carr-Goose). It occurs 
as Scare-Crow in Willughby. 
CarR-GoosE or CarcoosEe. An old name for the GREAT 
CRESTED GREBE: occurs as Cargoose in Charleton 
(1668). It arises from the bird frequenting the East 
Coast ‘ carrs,” or marshes. 
CARRION-CROW [No. 3]. The name “Carrion Crow.” 
appears in Merrett (1667) and in Willughby (1678) and is 
found as “ Carren Crow ” in “ A Brief description of Ireland 
made in this year 1589,” by Robert Payne (Irish Archeol. 
Soc. Tracts). Turner (1544) calls it “‘crouu” (=crow) 
simply. Crow is derived from A.Sax. crawe (see “ Craw ”’) ; 
