266 BIRDS OF FLLINOIS. 



where it rested on the bottom of the pond, the water bt-iiiL'' 

 abont figlit inches deep. The part above the water vva/8 cir- 

 cular, twelve inches in breadth, the central depression being: 

 rather shallow, and an inch in depth and five or six in breadth. 

 There was no lining, and the whole presented an appearance of 

 solidity resembling masonry. The iif)per part of the rim wa8 

 only about two and one half inches above the surface of the 

 pond, and could not po.-sibly iiave floated had the water risen 

 to any heiuht. Whoti about three weeks old the young dive for 

 their own food, though the niotber feeds them long afterward. 

 The young have been caught as late as September 15, and it 

 is probable that this bird has two or three broods in a sea- 

 son. * * * * 



"These birds are usually perfectly fearless, swimming quite near 

 to the spectator, and trusting to their power of diving to escape 

 from danger. They become sus])i('ious, however, after having 

 been shot at. They can swim to a long distance under water, 

 merely raising the bill above the surface occasionally, and they 

 are somewhat nocturnal in habit. In the spring they make a 

 loud and sonorous braying noise. They feed on small fish and 

 insects, and prefer to hunt for them in places covered with dense 

 aquatic vegetation, being chiefly fresh- water birds, tlK^ugh seek- 

 ing the bays in the winter. This bird has the singular habit, 

 in common with all the other Grebes, of sinking down gradually 

 and backwards into the water until it entirely disappears, not 

 leaving a ripple on the surface. This it does in order to escape, 

 when not compelled to dive quickly." {Water Bu'ds of Aorth 

 America, Vol. II., pp. 442, 443.) 



