SNOW BUNTING. A471 
Tawny, and the Snow Bunting of authors, are only terms 
which refer to one and the same species under different 
states of plumage. Colonel Montagu in the Appendix to 
the Supplement of his Ornithological Dictionary, quotes a 
portion of a letter to himself from Mr. Foljambe,—an ex- 
cellent practical ornithologist,—which first furnished to him 
a key to the true elucidation of the subject: the extract 
is as follows :—‘“‘ A few years ago I shot more than forty 
from the same flock, during severe weather in the month of 
January, hardly any two of which exhibited precisely the 
same plumage, but varied from the perfect Tawny to the 
Snow Bunting in its whitest state; the feathers of those 
of the intermediate state being more or less charged with 
white.” 
The Snow Bunting may be generally considered as only 
a winter visitor to this country, and to the other temperate 
parts of HKurope ; a portion of the young birds of the year, 
bred in high northern latitudes, annually visiting our is- 
lands. It is only in severe weather, and late in the winter 
season, that the older birds make their appearance, the 
young birds always venturing farthest to the southward. 
The Snow Bunting is an inhabitant, during the breeding- 
season, of the Arctic Regions, and the islands of the Polar 
Sea. Captain Scoresby says it resorts to the shores of 
Spitzbergen in large flocks. It is included by Captain 
Sabine in his Birds of Greenland ; and he says, also, that 
it was very numerous in the North Georgian Islands, where 
they were amongst the earliest arrivals. Captain James 
Ross, in his Appendix,—which has been frequently quoted, 
—says that it abounds in all parts of the Arctic Regions, 
from the middle or end of April to the end of September. 
Dr. Richardson states that this bird “ breeds in the north- 
ernmost of the American islands, and on all the shores of 
