388 



PINGUIN. 



6 —NEW-HOLLAND PINGUIN. 



LENGTH two feet or more. Bill black, the upper mandible 

 hooked at the tip, the under truncated ; plumage above brown, the 

 feathers tipped with grey, giving a mixed appearance; chin, throat, 

 and the rest of the parts beneath rufous white ; wings as in other 

 Pinguins, and brown ; legs pale flesh-coloured brown ; webs black. 



Inhabits New-Holland, met with at Port Jackson, but is scarce, 

 called there Gur-roo-mul. 



7— CHILOE PINGUIN. 



Aptenodytes Chiloensis, Tnd. Orn.'n. 881. Gin. Lin.\. 559. Buf. ix. 415. iv. Tern. 



Man. Ed. 2d. Anal, cxiii. 

 Diomedea Chiloensis, Molin. Chil. 210. Id. Fr. Ed. 219. 

 Chiloe Pinguin, Gen. St/n. Sup. ii. 361. 



SIZE of a Duck. The body covered with a kind of ash-coloured 

 down, of so fine a texture, as to admit of being spun into threads, 

 and made into garments, coverings of beds, and other purposes, for 

 which it is greatly valued. The wings in this bird are bare of 

 feathers; and the feet are furnished with four toes. 



Inhabits the Archipelago of Chiloe in South America, where it 

 is very common, and called Quethu. 



8 —PAPUAN PINGUIN. 



Aptenodytes Papua, Ind. Orn. ii. 879. Gm. Lin. i. 556. Com. Goett.m. 113. t. 3. 



Le Manchot Papou, Son. Voy. 181. pi. 115. 



Papuan Pinguin, Gen.Syn.v\. 505. Cook's last Voy. 1. 88. 



LENGTH two feet and a half. Bill four inches long, and red ; 

 the upper mandible bent at the tip, the under moderately pointed ; 



