72 NORTH AMERICAN SHOREBIRDS. 
States National Museum); and in California north to Owen Lake 
(Fisher) and San Francisco (Newberry). : It also ranges south through 
Mexico to the Pacific coast of Guatemala at Chiapam (Salvin). It 
is a casual wanderer in the West Indies; Cuba, June, July, October 
(Gundlach); Jamaica, July, 1863 (Marek) St. Vincent, once in the 
fall (Lawrence). 
Spring migration.—When the Jong-billed curlew was common on 
the Atlantic coast, it was seldom seen in spring north of the Carolinas; 
the few individuals that passed up the New England coast usually : 
appeared in May: Hail Point, Maryland, May 23, 1893 (Kirkwood); 
Scarboro, Me., May 2, 1866 (Knight). Migration in the Mississippi 
Valley begins in March: Eagle Pass, March 5, 1885 (Negley); Pecos 
City, March 9, 1906 (Ligon); Gainesville, March 4, 1876 (Ragsdale)— 
all in Texas; Warrensburg, Mo., April 1,.1874 (Scott); Appleton City, 
Mo., April 3, 1906 (Prier); central Illinois, average April 9; Jasper, 
Ind., April 2, 1896 (Butler); central Iowa, average April 11, earliest 
April 3, 1883 (Lindley); northern Nebraska, average April 3, earliest 
March 28, 1889 (Bates) ; Vermilion, S. Dak., April 5 ,1884 (Agersborg); 
central North Dakota, average April 15, earliest April 8, 1886 (Kd- 
wards); Aweme, Manitoba, average April 22, earliest April 9, 1902 
(Criddle); Apache, N. Mex., March 25, 1886 (Anthony); Utah ‘Lake, 
Utah, March 30, 1899 (J ohnson); ‘ northern Colorado, average April 14, 
earliest April 10, 1889 (Smith) ; Cheyenne, Wyo., average April 18, 
earliest April 15, 1889 (Bond); Terry, Mont., average April 16, earliest 
April 7, 1906 (Cameron); ; Big Sandy, Mont., average April 19, earliest 
April 13, 1903 (Coubeaux); Fort Klamath, Oreg., March, 28, 1887 
(Merrill) ; Chelan, Wash., April 6, 1896 (Dawson); : Okanagan Landing, 
British Columbia, April 12, 1906 (Brooks). 
Eggs have been taken at Camp. Harney, Oregon, April 30, 1876 
(Bendire); Fort Klamath, Oreg., May 7, 1878 (Mearns); Lewistown, 
Mont., May 13, 1902 (Gilloway); Fort Lapwai, Idaho, May 21, 1871 
(Bendire): ; Cody, Nebr., young just hatched June 23, 1895 (Trostler); 
southern Saskatchewan, downy young June 1, 1905 (Bent); June 11 
and 18, 1906 (Bent). 
Fall migration. —Flocks of fall Sdigeanta ‘aged. to appear on. the 
Atlantic coast about the middle of July (Mearns) and reach South 
Carolina by early August (Hoxie). They returned to Monterey Bay, 
California, July 17, 1894 (Loomis), and arrived at Cape St., Lucas, 
Lower California, September 15, 1859 (Xantus). The last one seen 
at Montreal in 1893 was observed September 21 (Wintle), and on the 
coast of Massachusetts the species has been noted to October 18 
(Howe and Allen). 
Hudsonian Curlew. Numenius hudsonicus Lath. 
Breeding range-—The Hudsonian curlew, or jack curlew as it is 
called by sportsmen, is known to breed on the barren grounds of. 
northern Mackenzie (MacFarlane) and on the western coast of 
