Vor. II, Pr. 11] LOOMIS—A REVIEW OF THE TUBINARES 177 
DETAILED MEASUREMENTS (in millimeters) 
No. Sex Wing Tail Culmen Tarsus Middle Toe 
and Claw 
582 fof 173 83 15.9 Sie 27.9 
584 fof 179 82 15.8 31.4 28 
596 fof 178 85 15.4 30.5 30.5 
603 of 174 81 15.8 32 28.9 
617 o 178 83 17 SYED 29 
625 rot 175 87 16 30.7 30.1 
637 fof 173 88 15.4 29.8 29 
643 fof 172 82 16 31 28 
647 o 180 88 17 S242 29 
652 of 175 82 15. 30.6 30.2 
9228 fof 173 83 152 29.8 Dies 
9237 of 176 82 16 30.4 30 
9247 ot 177 88 16 30.5 30 
9256 ou 182 92 ez 31 28 
9266 fot 180 87 16.3 33 29.5 
9269 fot 179 87 15.6 231.8 30 
608 Q 173 84 SiG 7 30.6 30.5 
618 2 176 78 16 30.6 30 
620 2 182 90 16.2 31 28 
624 9 177 85 1525 32 29.1 
628 2 181 85 16.3 32 28.7 
655 2 173 84 16.6 30.7 30 
9243 $e} 177 87 15 32.1 28.8 
9262 2 175 88 16 32.5 30 
9263 2 179 88 16.4 30.4 30 
9288 2 181 88 16.3 31.5 28.9 
Oceanodroma furcata (Gmelin): FoRK-TAILED PETREL 
Covrs—Oceanodroma furcata, I, 74, 89. 
SaLvin—Oceanodroma furcata, 347, 357. 
GopMAN—Oceanodroma furcata, xxxvi, 38, pl. 11. 
South of California we have no record of the occurrence of 
this storm petrel. The Revilla Gigedo Expedition found it 
common and obtained specimens while the schooner Mary 
Sachs was becalmed on the 10th, 11th, and 12th of August, 
1903, fifteen to twenty-five miles west of Point Reyes, Cali- 
fornia. In his Galapagos Expedition notes Mr. Gifford men- 
tions only a solitary individual, seen November 29, 1906, near 
the Farallon Islands, California. Off Point Pinos, California, 
Mr. Beck secured sixteen specimens early in November, 1903, 
and saw several on November 1, 1909. In the same vicinity 
Mr. L. L. Edner found tardy northbound migrants plentiful 
on June 13, 1895,* and Mr. Edmund Silliman stormbound 
1 Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci., 2d ser., v. 6, p. 28. 
