36 
34. 
RUSTY 
BY 
DeEscRIPTION. 
PLACE, 
Sinn 
TEST ACEOUS 
F 
DESCRIPTION. 
PLACE. 
36. 
JAVAN 
F 
DESCRIPTION. 
+ 
Peay) Lee Br Oven, 
In the fame places have been met with, another, which appeared 
ftill more like the Afoor Buzzard, as well as a third, quite black, 
with the rump entirely white. 
Falco rubiginofus, fd. Orn. i. p. 27. 6. 
HE bill is black: legs yellow: the head wholly of a whitifh 
yellow ; cheeks rufty: body above brown, beneath yellowifh 
white, with an irregulan rufty-coloured fpot on the breaft: quills 
brown, with the outer edges hoary, within brown, with feveral white 
bands: tail brown, croffed with four teftacecus bands. 
Inhabits Sclavonia. 
Faucon teftacé, Daudin. Orn. i. p. 125. Ci. 
IZE ofa Gofhawk: length twenty-one inches: bill blueith: cere, 
- jrides, and legs yellow: the head, and all the upper parts of the 
bird, are teftaceous brown: the fhafts of the feathers blackifh: throat 
and fore part of the neck nearly white, inclining to teftaceous on 
the breaft; from thence to the vent reddifh brown: the vent itfelf 
white: quills dufky, fpotted on the inner webs with whice: tail 
btown above, and pale beneath, where it is croffed with five indifting& 
dufky bands. 
Inhabits the ifland of Fava: it was firft obferved perched on a 
rock, feizing on fuch fimall birds as paffed by within reach of him, 
and was by chance killed by a ftone thrown at him. : 
F, Javanicus, Ind. Orn. i. p. 27. §8.—Lichtemberg. Maga. iv. 2. 8, 
HE cere is black, but the middle of it is yellow: the head, 
neck, and breaft chefnut: the back brown: legs yellow. In- 
habits Fava, and is found chiefly on the fea coafts, feeding on fp. 
The 
