34 BIRDS OF COLORADO. 



McGregor, R. C. Two Runts. The Nidiologist, II. May, 

 1895,/. ^^9- 



A set of eggs of Swainson's Hawk, taken in Weld County, Colo., June i, 

 1887, contained one "runt" egg. 



McGregor, R. C. Birds of Estes Park. Nidiologist, IV. 

 1896-7, A j<?. 

 Short notes on the occurrence of 76 species. 



Merrill, J. C. Oological Notes from Montana. B. N. O. C. 



VI. i88i,A 204. 



Refers to tlie fact that the first four nests of the Ruby-crowned Kinglet 

 known to science came from Colorado. 



Miller, Olive Thorne. A Bird Lover in the West. Boston 

 and New York: Houghton, MiflSin & Company. The 

 Riverside Press, Cambridge, 1894. pp. I- VII. 1-278. 

 Notes on the habits and nesting of several species of birds found in the 



vicinity of Colorado Springs. 



MiNOT, H. D. Notes on Colorado Birds. B. N. O. C. V. 



1880, p. 22 J. 



Annotated notes on 44 species taken at Boulder, 5,000 feet altitude; 

 Nederland, 8,000 feet, and Seven Lakes, near Manitou, 11,000 feet altitude. 

 The first and only record for Saxicola oenanthe, taken at Boulder, May 14, 1880. 



MoiIrison, C. F. Field Notes on some Birds of Colorado. 

 O. & O. XL 1886, pp. /5j and 164, continued in O. & O. 



XII. 1887, p. 2y and j^, ^8 and 106. 



Notes on 31 species taken at Fort Lewis, Colorado. The "Pinnated 

 Grouse" referred to is of course the "Sharp-tailed Grouse." 



Morrison, C. F. A List of Some Birds of La Plata County, 



Colorado, with Annotations. O. & O. XIII. 1888,/. 70, 



joy^ 115 and /jp. 



Quite full notes on 116 species, with the first record for Colorado of 

 Meleagris gallopavo mexicana. 



Morrison, C. F. A List of the Birds of Colorado. O. & O. 



XIII. 1888, p. 1 4-5, 165 and 181, continued in O. & O. 



XIV. 1889, p. 6, 6s and 7/5, concluded in O. & O. XV. 

 1890,/. j(5. 



The most extensive list of Colorado birds published up to this time. 

 Begins with No. i of the A. O. U. Check List and closes with No. 570 a, enum- 

 erating 233 species. The list was never completed, owing to the destruction by 

 fire of much of the material. In addition to records of Colorado birds already 

 in print, the author had the use of a large amount of unpublished notes sent 

 him by local collectors. The list, if completed at that time, would have shown 

 326 species; but as the records of some fourteen species recorded here have 

 since been ascertained to be incorrect, it would reduce the real number to 312, 

 or 35 more than Mr. Drew's list published three years previous. In this list 

 appear for the first time Ajaja ajaja, Tringa fuscicollis, Callipepla gambeli, 

 Nyctea nyctea, and Junco phceonotus dorsalis. 



