1865. 
1872. 
1872. 
1873. 
1873. 
1874. 
1874. 
1875. 
Bibliography. 345 
Hoy, P. R.—Journal of an Exploration of Western Missouri in 
1854, under the Auspices of the Smithsonian Institution.< (Wine- 
teenth) Annual Report Smiths. Inst. (for 1864), 1865, pp. 
431-438. 
This is the first list of Missouri birds published. Notes and 
ee Et were collected in the Kansas City region. This 
er is the sole vauthority for the occurrence here of the 
ae Sandpiper. 
ALLEN, J. A.—Notes of an Ornithological Reconnoissance of Por- 
tions of Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming and Utah.< Bull. Mus. Comp. 
Zool., Vol. III, No. 6, July, 1872, pp. 113-183. 
Contains notes of interest made during ten days’ collecting 
at Fort Leavenworth. Three articles in the American Natur- 
alist te 1872 contain a summary of this valuable paper. 
Snow, F. H—A Catalogue of the Birds of Kansas contributed to 
the Kansas Academy of nea lt cas H. Snow, Professor of 
— History and Met logy, in the University of Kansas, 
at Lawrence. Second oer pice 1872. Kansas City, 1872. 
Pp. 1. 
Lists 282 species. 
Cloves], E.—Ornithology of the West.<American Naturalist, 
vol. VII, 1873, pp. 221-223. 
A review of J. A. Allen’s paper listed above (1872). 
Snow, F. H.—Catalogue of the Birds of Kansas.< Trans. Kans. 
State Board of Agriculture for 1872, April, 1873, pp. 375-386. 
Changes were made in a edition of the Snow list, but the 
total pica 282 speci 
Barrp, Brewer, and Rmeway.—A History of North American 
Birds, by S. F. Baird, T. M. Brewer and R. Ridgway. Land Birds. 
Vols. I-III. Boston: Little, Brown & Company. 1874. 
bat sian reference cites a few specimens and records 
from this region 
Coves, Exxiorr.—Birds of the Northwest. A Handbook of the 
Ornithology of the Region drained by the Missouri River and 
its Tributaries. By Elliott Coues, Captain and Assistant Sur- 
geon, U. S. Army, Dept. of Int., U. S. Geol. Survey. Misc. Pub. 
No. 3. Waskideton 1874, 
This book is invaluable to the student of birds of the Mis- 
souri Valley 
Syow, F. H—A Catalogue of the Birds of Kansas contributed 
to the Kansas as Academy of Science, by F. H. Snow, Professor of 
ects History and Meteorology, in the University of Kansas, 
Lawrence. Third Edition. Pamph. 14 pp., 1875. 
These lists of Prof. Snow may be consulted with profit by 
the student of western Missouri birds. The number of spe- 
cies is here increased to 295 
