Catalogue of Birds found in Europe and America. 
395 
ScoLopAacip#—continued. 
America. 
Numenius borealis.* Lath. (Esquemaux 
Curlew.) 
Northern and Eastern North America. 
(Baird, Cassin, and Lawrence.) 
Two are supposed to have come from 
Greenland. (Newton.) 
Central America to Brazil. (Sclater and 
Salvin.) 
Found at Buenos Ayres. (Dresser.) 
Numeniuspheopus. 
Nearly a dozen examples have been 
received from all parts of Greenland. 
(Newton.) 
Europe. 
Numenius borealis. 
According to Mr. Harting’s Handbook, 
one occurred near Stonehaven, Kincar- 
dineshire, 6 Sept., 1855. (Longmuir, 
Naturalist, 1855, p. 265.) 
One near Aldeburg, Suffolk. 
Notes about Aldeburg, p. 177.) 
One Woodbridge, Suffolk. (Hele, op. cit.) 
One Sligo, Ireland; purchased in the 
flesh in Dublin, 21 Oct., 1870. (Blake 
Knox, Zool., 1870, p. 2408.) 
(Hele, 
Numenius pheopus.* Linn. (Whimbrel.) 
According to Yarrell it breeds in Orkney 
and Shetland. Found in the British 
Isles, Denmark, Sweden, Western 
Norway, Lapland (Breeds, Dall), 
Faroe Isles, Iceland, migrating through 
Europe by Germany, Holland (com- 
mon), France, Spain, and Italy, to 
North Africa and Madeira. Menetries 
found it in the province of Caucasus. 
Common in parts of India, Himalayas 
(Gould), Bengal, and Japan. (Tem- 
minck, ) 
PHALAROPODID. 
Phalaropus fulicarius.* (L.) Bp. 
Entire temperate North America. (Baird, 
Cassin, and Lawrence.) 
Breeds in the far North. (Dresser. ) 
Found in Greenland. (Newton.) 
Phalaropus hyperboreus.* (L.) Temm. 
The whole of temperate North America. 
(Baird, Cassin, and Lawrence.) 
Greenland. (Newton.) 
Mexico and Guatemala. (Sclater and 
Salvin. ) 
Phalavopus fulicarius.* (u.) Bp. (Gray 
Phalarope, or Red Phalarope.) 
Northern Europe, British Isles, Iceland, 
Spitzbergen ; rare in Scandinavia; 
very rare in Northern Russia; not 
common in North Germany. Has 
occurred in Belgium, France, Spain, 
Portugal, Italy, South Germany; and 
once in North Africa, at Tangier, 
according to Tyrwhitt-Drake in the 
Ibis, 1876, p. 429. 
It occurs right across Siberia; and ac- 
cording to Blyth in Ibis, 1859, p. 464, 
one was taken near Calcutta; and 
according to Mr. Hume's ‘ Stray 
Feathers,” it is found in Scindh. 
(Dresser. ) 
Phalaropus hyperboreus.* (L.) Temm. 
(Red-necked Phalarope, or Northern 
Phalarope. ) 
Northern Europe. Common in Northern 
Scandinavia ; rarer further south, as 
in Holland, France, and Southern 
Russia; but has occurred in North- 
Western Africa. It is found across 
Asia to Japan, in Siberia, Turkestan, 
and Northern China. (Dresser. ) 
