AND NORTHERN GUZERAT. 41 
These birds are :— 
Lithofaleo esalon, P. 
Aquila chrysetos, P. 
Pandion hallietus, E. 
Halietus albicilla, E, 
Milvus major, E. 
Cypselus apus, P. 
Coracias garrula, P. 
Alcedo ispida, 8. 
Picus scindianus, P. 
Hypocolius ampelinus, 8. 
Chatarrhea Earlii, E. 
Laticilla Burnesi, E. 
Oriolus galbula, 8. 
Pratincola leucura, EH. 
Saxicola alboniger, 8. 
Sazxicola monacha, S. 
Acrocephalus agricolus, E. 
Calamodyta melanopogon, E. 
Cettia cetti, S. 
Blanjfordius striatulus, 8. 
Phylloscopus neglectus, P. 
Reguloides occipitalis, EH, 
Sylvia delicatula, P. 
Scotocerca inquieta, P. 
Budytes citreola, E. 
Ploceus bengalensis, E. 
Bucanetes githagineus, 8S. 
Ammomanes lusitania, P. 
Pyrrhulauda melanauchen, E, 
Alaudula Adamsi, P. 
Palumbena Eversmanni, P. 
Columba livia, P. 
Pterocles Lichtensteinii, 8. 
Pterociles alchata, P. 
Pterocles coronatus, S. 
Caccabis chukor, P. 
Ammoperdix Bonhami, P. 
Vanellus cristatus, E. 
Dromas ardeola, E. 
Grus leucogeranus, E. 
. Gallinago Horsfieldi. E. 
Tringa crassirostris, EB. 
Tringa platyrhyncha, EB. 
Phalaropus fulicarius, E. 
Lobipes hyperboreus, E. 
Porzana maruetta, E. 
Porzana minuta, 8. 
Ardetta minuta, P. 
Anser erythropus, E. 
Dendrocygna major, E. 
Podiceps nigricollis, 8. 
Puffinus persicus, S. 
Stercorarius parasiticus, E, 
Larus occidentalis, S. 
Larus Lambruschini, 8. 
Larus ichthyetus, P. 
Larus ridibundus, E. 
Larus Hemprichii, BE. 
Sterna caspia, E. 
Sterna cantiaca, HE. 
Of this long list, however, a considerable number, though not 
yet recorded from any other part of the region with which we 
have been dealing, might well be met with there as they occur 
elsewhere in India. To these I have affixed the letter HK. Many 
others again belong equally to Sindh, and the North-West 
Punjab and the Western Himalayahs or Cashmere; these I have 
marked with the letter P. The rest, (distinguished by the 
letter 8.) occur, so far as we know at present, nowhere else 
within Indian limits.—A. O. H.] 
A Contribution to the Ornithology of Eastern Turkestan, 
By J. Scutty, Surgeon, Bengal Army. 
The origin of the following imperfect paper on the Birds of 
Kashgharia is as follows :— 
In May 1874, while officiating as Garrison Surgeon at Fort 
William, and when I was deep in Arabic studies, I had the 
honor of being appointed Medical Officer to the Kashghar 
Political Agency, with orders to start off, at very short notice, 
to Eastern Turkestan. Although I was not instructed to make 
any collection of objects of Natural History, I naturally did a 
little in that direction, for my own satisfaction, during the 
twelve months I passed in the territory of the Amir of Kash- 
ghar. On my return to Calcutta, towards the end of last year, 
F 
