HORNED LARK. 
SHORE LARK. 
OTOCORIS ALPESTRIS. 
Cuar. Above, dull grayish brown streaked with darker; nape, shoul- 
ders, and rump pink-vinaceous cinnamon; black bar across forehead and 
along sides of head, terminating in erectile horn-like tufts; throat and 
line over the eyes, yellow; black bar from nostril curving below the eyes; 
below, dull white, shaded on the sides with same color as back; breast 
tinged with yellow and bearing large black patch; middle tail-feathers 
like back, the rest black, with white patches on outer pair. Length about 
7% inches. 
Nest. On the ground, amid a bed of moss; composed of grass, lined 
with feathers. 
Eggs. 4-5; dull white with buff or purple tint spotted with purplish 
brown or olive brown and lilac; 0.93 X 0.70. 
This beautiful species is common to the north of both the old 
and new continent ; but, as in some other instances already re- 
marked, the Shore Lark extends its migrations much farther over 
America than over Europe and Asia. Our bird has been met 
with in the Arctic regions by the numerous voyagers, and Mr. 
Bullock saw it in the winter around the city of Mexico, so that 
in their migrations over this continent these birds spread them- 
selves across the whole habitable northern hemisphere to the 
very equator ; while in Europe, according to the careful obser- 
