474 EMBERIZID &. 
snow in the Lapland Alps. This bird breeds in Iceland, 
and on the Faroe Islands. Mr. Hewitson, in his notes on 
the Ornithology of Norway, printed in the Magazine of 
Zoology, says, ‘‘ we saw the Snow Buntings in their beau- 
tiful plumage of black and white, and found a single nest 
with the young under some loose stones.” In Sweden 
this bird mhabits the highest hills in summer, and valleys 
in winter. Muller includes it as a bird of Denmark. Dr. 
Neill, Dr. Fleming, and Mr. Dunn, mention the Snow 
Bunting as a winter visitor to Shetland and Orkney ; and 
Dr. Fleming adds that in Zetland it is called Oatfowl, 
from the preference which it gives to that kind of grain. 
Sir William Jardine, Bart. of Applegarth, Dumfries- 
shire, whose extensive acquirements in various branches of 
Natural History are so well known, has most liberally sup- 
plied me with valuable information from his own notes on 
the localities of our birds in Scotland ; and under the head 
of the Snow Bunting, quoting from his communication, I 
find that this bird is common in Dumfriesshire during the 
winter, frequenting the sheep pasture lands, at an elevation 
of from fifteen hundred to two thousand feet, descending 
in severe weather to lower ranges. In very severe times 
it is shot on the banks of the Annan and in the Holm lands 
adjoiming ; is common on the Alpine ranges of the upper 
part of Tweed-dale, and always to be seen from the high 
road when travelling that country in winter; frequents 
the Pentland Hills, Portobello Sands, Middleton Muir 
at the head of Gala Water, and is said to be frequent in 
winter on all the sub-alpine ranges in the south of Scotland, 
descending to the shore in very severe weather. 
We are indebted to Mr. Macgillivray for interesting ob- 
servations on this species in the Hebrides, and also in Scot- 
land: they are as follows:— ‘The earliest period at 
