572 



P I N G U I N. 



RED-FOOTED 

 P. 



Phaeton demerfus, Lin. Syfi. i. p. 219. 



Aptenodytes catarrattes, Comment at. Gott. iii. p. 145. 



Le Gorfou, Brif. Orn. vi. p. 102. 



Red-footed Penguin, Edw. pi. 49. — Phil. Tranf. lviii. p. 98. 



Dsscription. CIZEofa Goofe. Bill two inches and a third in length, and 

 red j both mandibles pointed, and the upper one very little 

 bent : fore part of the head dirty brown ; the back part of it, 

 and all the upper parts of the neck and body, a dirty purple : 

 all the under parts white * : wings brown, fringed with white : 

 tail fhort, briftly, and black : legs, toes, and membranes, of a 

 dirty red : claws brown. 

 Pla.ce. Inhabits the South Seas* 



LITTLE P. 

 Pl. cm. 



Description. 



Aptenodytes minor, Commentat. Gott. iii. p. 147. 

 Small Penguin, Cook's laft Voy. i. p. 15 k 

 Lev. Muf. 



OIZE of a teal: length fifteen inches. Bill an inch and a half 

 long, in fhape much like that of the red-footed; colour 

 dufky ; the under mandible fomewhat truncated, and blue at the 

 bafe : irides livid : the upper parts of the bird, from head to 

 tail, appear cinereous blue, the ends of the feathers being of that 

 colour, but the bafe of them is brown black, the fhafts of each 

 feather black : round the eye, and a little way below on each 

 fide, is a bed of pale brownifh afh-colour : the under parts, from 

 chin to vent, white : wings dufky above, and white beneath : tail 



Edwardi's bird was undulated on the under parts. 



very 



