7l6 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF CANADA. 



at Brackley Point, Prince Edward Island, July, 1888; not rare on 

 Cape Breton Island, 1898. {Macoun.) Breeds abundantly about 

 St. John, N.B. {Chamberlain.) Breeding abundantly at Scotch 

 Lake, York Co., N.B. {W. H. Moore) Observed everywhere in 

 the Restigouche valley, N.B. {Brittain & Cox) • Slightly more 

 abundant than the olive-backed thrush on Prince Edward Island. 

 (Dwight) 



Common; breeding on most of the Magdalen Islands. {Bishop) 

 On Anticosti and everywhere on the'north shore of the St. Law- 

 rence this is an abundant species. {Brewster) Not rare at Lake 

 Misfassini, Que. ; breeding in June, 1885. (/. M. Macoun) 

 Common summer resident on Montreal Island. Breeds in the 

 city of Montreal and in Mount Royal park. This is the most 

 common thrush here. Found a nest of this thrush on a grassy 

 bank in a small wood at St. Bruno, containing four incubated eggs. 

 May 24th, 1885. (yVintle) Common in certain places in eastern 

 Quebec in summer. {Dionne) ' 



A common summer resident around Ottawa. {OttawaNaturalist, 

 Vol. V.) I heard this bird frequently on the Magdalen Islands. 

 Have found it breeding near Lansdowne, Ont., as well as on 

 Wolfe Island, near Kingston, Ont. {Rev. C.J. Young) A 

 common summer resident in Parry Sound and Muskoka districts. 

 I took a nest on May 17th, 1897, which Was built among dead 

 leaves at the base of a dead ironwood sapling and contained 

 four eggs. (/. H. Fleming) A passing migrant at Guelph, Ont. 

 {A. B. Klugh) 



A common summer resident of woodlands in Manitoba. 

 {Thompson-Seton) First seen at Medicine Hat, Assa., May nth, 

 1894, and last seen on the 15th, a rare migrant; a common sum- 

 mer resident at Banff, Rocky Mountains in 1891; observed a few in 

 thick woods near White Mud River, Lat. 56° 30', in June, 1903; 

 first seen at Edmonton, Alta., May 3rd, 1897, last seen May loth, 

 all were migrant's; one shot in Eagle Pass, west of Revelstoke, 

 B.C., May 9th, 1890. {Spreadborough) North to Fort Simpson 

 on the Mackenzie River. {Ross) Abundant at the Grand Rapids 

 of the Saskatchewan. {Nutting) First noted between Edmon- 

 ton and Athabasca Landing, May 22nd, 1888; common between 

 that place and Lesser Slave River; very common down the Atha- 

 basca to Fort McMurray, Lat. 56° 40'; common up the Clearwater 



