25] 



BIBLIOGRAPHICAL APPENDIX. 1794-179G 591 



1794. LosKiEL, G. H. History | of the | Mission | of the | United Breth- 

 ren I among the | Indians in North America. | — | In Three 

 Parts. I — I By I George Henry Loakiel. | — | Translated from the 

 German | by Christian Ignatius La Trobe. i — | London : | printed 

 for the Brethren's Society for the | Furtherance of the Gospel : | sold 

 at No. 10, Nevil's Court, Fetter Lane; | and by John Stoclsdale, 

 opposite Burlington House, | Piccadilly. | — | 1794. 1 vol. sm. 8vo. 

 Part I, pp. i-xii, map, 1-159. Part II, pp. 1-234. Part III, pp. 1-233, 

 + 11 unpaged 11. of index and ads. 



Orig. German ed., 1788 ; in thepresentone, Parti, Chap. VII, " Birds ", pp. 89-94, 

 tliere are remarks upon a few large or otherwise conspionona species, such as 

 wonld be likely to attract the casual observation of a missionary. These are 

 presented for the most part under binomial Latin as well as vernacular names. 

 The ubiquitous " Wakon bird", here called "the bird of the Great Spirit, and 

 probably a species of the bird of paradise ", reappears, clothed in a very gorgeous 

 description. 



1794. Williams, S. Natural and Civil History of Vermont. . . . 



Walpole, N. H. 1794. 8vo. 



Kot seen. There is a later edition, 1809, g. v. About a dozen pages are said to 

 be devoted to the birds of the State, some 50 species being treated, under tech- 

 nical names, with various notes. 



1795. Hkarnb, S. a | Journey | from | Prince of Wales's Fort in Hudson's 



Bay, I to I the Northern Ocean. | Undertaken | by order of the Hud- 

 son's Bay Company, | for the Discovery | of copper mines, A North- 

 west passage, &o. | In the years 1769, 1770, 1771, & 1772. | — | By 

 Samuel Hearne. | — | London: | printed for A. Strahan and T. 

 Cadell : | And Sold by T. Cadell Jun. and W. Davis, (Successors to | 

 Mr. Cadell,) in the Strand. I 1795. 1 vol. large 4to. pp. i-sliv, 1-458, 

 1 1., 9 maps and views. ]> Birds. Chap. X. pp. 398-448. 



" The account of the principal quadrupeds and birds that frequent those North- 

 em regions in summer, as well as those which never migrate, though not de- 

 scribed in a soientiflc manner, may not be entirely unacceptable to the most sci- 

 entific zoologists, " says the author modestly, in his preface ; and I entirely agree 

 with him. He gives a good, faithful account of his observations on some fifty 

 or more species, among them the notable " Homed "Wavey " (p. 442), which after- 

 ward became Anser rossii of Baird. The whole story of " honest old Hearne " 

 is interesting as well as veracious, and may be profitably consulted to this day. 



1796. Carver, J. Three years | Travels | through the | interioi parts | of | 



North America, | for more than | five thousand miles; | containing | 

 an account of the great lakes, and all the lakes, islands, | and rivers, 

 Cataracts, mountains, minerals, | soil and vegetable productions of 

 the North- | west regions of that vast continent; | with a | descrip- 

 tion of the Birds, beasts, | reptiles, insects, and fishes | peculiar to 

 the country. | Together with a concise | history of the genius, man- 

 ners, and customs | of the Indians inhabiting the lands that lie | ad- 

 jacent to the heads and to the westward | of the great river Missis- 

 sippi ; I and an appendix, | describing the uncultivated parts of 

 America that | are the most proper for forming settlements. | — j 

 By Captain Jonathan Carver, | of the provincial troops in Amer- 

 ica. I — I Philadelphia: | Published by Key & Simpson; — 1796. 

 1 vol. "8vo" (half-sheets, 4 1. to a sig.). pp. i-xx, 1-360, 1-20. 

 >Chap. XVIIL > Of the Birds, pp. 309-316. 



