66 
80. 
OLIVE THR. 
DEscRIPTION, S 
PLACE. 
81. 
INDIAN THR. 
DESCRIPTION. 
PLace. 
me VEL RS Us Seyi 
Turdus olivaceus, Liz. Syf. i. p. 292+ N° 5.—Mantif. 1771. p. 526. 
Le Merle olive du Cap de Bonne Efperance, Brif. orn. ii. p. 294. N° 43. 
pl. 22. f. 3.— Buf. o:f- iii. p. 381. 
IZE of the Redwing: length eight inches and a quarter. Bill 
brown: the upper parts of the plumage olive brown; the 
under yellow: the throat yellow brown, fpotted with brown: 
legs and claws brown. 
Inhabits the Cape of Good Hope. 
In the Mantiffa, Linnaeus adds, that the /ore is black: upper 
part of the body brownifh grey: all beneath, and the rump, fer- 
ruginous : the two middle tail feathers brown; the others ferru- 
ginous. In one fpecimen the head was hoary. 
Le Merle olive des Indes, Brif. orn. ii. p. 298. N° 45. pl. 31. fi 2.— 
Buf. vif. iii. p. 384.— Pl. end. 564. f. te 
Br. Muf. 
ESS than the Redwing: length eight inches. Bill blackith : 
the upper parts of the body are deep olive green; the under 
parts the fame, but paler, and inclined to yellow: the quills 
have the inner webs brown, the outer olive green, with the 
edge for two-thirds from the bafe yellowifh: the tail olive green: 
legs blackith. 
Inhabits the Zaft Indies. That in the Br. Mu/. is rather fmaller,. 
and has the chin dufky black. 
10 Le 
