128 THRUSH. 



tail brown; the quills darkest, and tipped with white; under parts 

 of the body, from the chin, yellowish white, crossed with many tine 

 lines of black next the wings ; tail rounded, the outer margins of 

 all the feathers marked with triangular spots of white ; legs blue. 

 Inhabits New South Wales ; name and manners unknown. 



164— BLUE-CROWNED THRUSH. 



LENGT(j seven inches and a half. Bill and legs dusky yellow; 

 top of the head, including the eyes, and nape, deep blue ; the rest 

 of the parts above olive brown; chin and throat white; sides of both 

 deep ferruginous ; belly pale, dirty rufous, towards the vent dusky 

 white ; quills deep rufous brown, with white shafts ; the tail dusky 

 bluish, two inches long, rounded at the end ; the quills reach to 

 about one-third. 



Inhabits New-Holland with the last, to which it is probably 

 allied. 



105— CRIMSON-FRONTED THRUSH. 



LENGTH seven inches. Bill sharp, black ; forehead crimson, 

 mixed with brown ; the rest of the upper parts olive brown, the 

 under pale dirty oker ; lower part of the back mixed, or patched, 

 with crimson ; quills and tail lead-colour; the last three inches long, 

 and even at the end ; the quills reach to about one-third ; legs long, 

 and brown. 



Inhabits New-Holland. — Mr. Lambert. 



