I46 BIBLIOGRAPHY: BIRDS, 1886. 



Anon, [not signed]. York S.E. 



[Notes made by the Hull Field Naturalists' Society ; Locustella ti&via noted, 

 abnormal number of eggs of Paras cceruleus and Erithacus rubecula, and 

 unusual numbers of Endromias morinellus]. Nat., Feb. 1886, p. 63. 



Anon, [not signed]. York Mid W. 



Grouse [Lagopus scoticus] driven from the Moors [to near Ilkley, Arthington, 

 and even Harewood, by severity of weather]. Land and Water, Feb. 6th, 

 1886, p. 138. 



Anox. [not signed]. York N.W. 



Grouse [Lagopus scotiats] in Yorkshire [affected by the severe weather in 

 Wensleydale]. Land and Water, Feb. 13th, 1886, p. 162. 



Anon, [signed 'A Yorkshire Sportsman']. 



York N.W., York S.W., Durham, Lane. S. 



The Exodus of Grouse [Pagopus scotiais] from the Yorkshire moors [con- 

 firmatory of James Carter's records ; also stating that on moors between 

 Burnley and Halifax, artificial feeding prevented the exodus]. Field, Feb. 

 13th, 1886, p. 208. 



Anon, [signed ' M.E.C.']. Lane. W. 



Early Throstle \Turdus musicus nesting Feb. nth, 1886, at Hillam, Cocker- 

 liam, Lancashire]. Nat. Hi^t. Journ., .March 15th, 1886, x. 43. 



Anon, [signed 'J. O.J. P. (Thornleigh, Chester)']. Cheshire. 



Occurrence of the Blackcap [Sylvia atricapilld] in March [on the 13th, near 

 Thornleigh, Chester]. Field, March 20th, 1886, p. 361. 



Anon, [signed ' Avis ']. Notts. 



Redshank [Totamts calidris] breeding in Notts, [four nests in one small 

 grass-field by the Trent near Newark : Editor adds a quotation from Sterland 

 and Whitaker's book]. Field, April 24th, 1886, p. 528. 



Anon, [signed 'C.M.V.']. Line. S. 



A curious instance of protective sagacity ... [in nidification of a pair 

 of Swans {Cygnus olor) at Washingboro' near Lincoln]. Sci. Goss, May 

 1886, p. 119. 



Anon, [not signed]. Line. S. 



Wild Animals paid for by Churchwardens in Bucks [and at Wigtoft, 

 Lincolnshire, where between 1512 and 1519, occurs the item ' Payd to Robt. 

 Baddenelle for stopping caudows out, O. 0. 4.' — i.e., for stopping Jackdaws 

 {Corvits moiiedula) out of the church]. Zool., June 1886, x. 252. 



Anon, [newspaper paragraph]. Cumberland. 



Great Destruction of Migrants in Cumberland by hunger and cold 

 [particularizing Hirundo rustica and Cottle riparia]. Nat. Hist. Journ., 

 June 15th, 1886, x. 108. 



Anon, [signed 'F.R.']. York Mid W. 



Sparrow [Passer domestictts] in a Sunday School [at Peamsley, Yorkshire, 

 Sunday, 15th August, 1886]. Nat. World, Sep. 1886, iii. 166. 



Anon, [signed 'J.S.M.']. York S.E. 



Late Stay of Swifts \\Cypselus apus) ; several flying about the cliffs above 

 Filey Brig, September 13th, 1886]. Field, Sep. 18th, 1886, p. 441. 



Anon, [not signed]. Isle of Man. 



Accounts of the Calf Island in 1708 [including an item as follows : The 

 Puffins [Fratercula arcticd\ of ye sd Isle this year being 2618 birds 

 at id 13 : 05 : o5]. Manx Note-Book, No. 8, Oct. 1S86, vol. 2, p. 190. 



Naturalist, 



