LIST AND EXPLANATION OF PLATES, 
Frontispiece. Centronyx Bairdii, Baird. —Baird’s Sparrow, 
taken at Ipswich, Mass. 
Pirate I.* Instruments used in preparing birds, etc., and for 
blowing eggs. Fig. 1, Common Pliers; Fig. 2, Cutting Pliers ; Fig. 
8, Tweezers; Fig. 4, Scalpel; Figs. 5 and 6, Egg-drills; Fig. 7, 
Blow-pipe; Fxg. 8, Hook for removing embryos from eggs. 
Puate II. — Winas, showing the positions of the different feathers, 
as follows : — 
Fug. 1. Wing of a Red tailed Hawk (Buteo borealis, Vieill.).— 
a indicates the primaries, or quills; b, secondaries; c, tertiaries; 
d, scapularies ; g, greater wing-coverts ; f, lesser wing-coverts ; e, spuri- 
ous wing, or quills. 
Fig 2. Wing of a Coot, or Mud Hen (Fulica Americana, Gmelin). — 
a indicates the primaries, or quills; b, secondaries; ¢, tertiaries; 
d, scapularies ; e, spurious wing, or quills. 
The tertiaries and scapularies are elongated in most of the aquatic 
birds, and in some of the Waders. They are always prominent, if not 
elongated, on long-winged birds, such as the Eagles, Hawks, Owls, 
Vuitures, ete.; while they are only rudimentary on short-winged birds, 
such as the Thrushes, Warblers, Sparrows, etc. 
Pirate II. Heap or tne Bato Eacwe (LHalicetus lencocephalus, 
Savieny), showing the different parts, as follows: —a, the throat; 
b, chin; c, commissure, or the folding edges of the mandibles; 4d, 
under mandible; s, gonys; p, gape; g, upper mandible; h, culmen$ 
i, tip; j, base of bill; k, cere (naked skin at the base of the upper 
mandible, prominent in the rapacious birds); 1, frontal feathers; 
m, lores; n, crown; 0, occiput. 
* Plates I, IV., V., VI., VIII., 1X , X., and the frontispiece will be more fully 
explained hereafter. 
