loos.] 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



551 



A general account of the Great Slave Lake region, mainly based on 

 several journeys made by the author, formerly a missionary in this 

 region. Contains many notes on natural history. 

 1892. [Editorial.] Summer Migrants at Fort Simpson. <Ibis, IV (sixth 

 ser.), p. 1S8. 1S92. 



Quotes Jl. G. McConnell, in Kept. Geol. Surv. Canada, lSSS-9, regard- 

 ing time of arrival of a few birds at Fort Simpson (and Fort Provi- 

 dence). Mackenzie. 



1892. McCoxxELL. R. G. Oi'is canadensis dalU, Nelson. <Ottawa Naturalist, 

 ^'1. pp. 13r»-l32. 



Record of specimen killed in mountains west of Fort McPherson in 

 1S88, with notes regarding distribution, weight, and variation of 

 species. 



1892. Pike. Wabburtox. The Barren Ground of Northern Canada. Svo, pp. 

 3(K). London and New York. 



Contains much original information regarding the fauna, especially 

 the larger game animals, of the country about the eastern end of Great 

 Slave Lake, the Barren Grounds about the head of Coppermine River 

 and the upper part of Back River, and of the Peace River Valley. 



1892. Raine. Walter. Bird-nesting in North-West Canada. By Walter Raine. 

 Illustrated. Svo. pp. 197. Toronto. 



An account of an egg-collecting excursion made along the line of the 

 Canadian Pacific Railroad, in Assiniboia and Alberta, during the sum- 

 mer of 1891, Mention made of the nesting of a few species at 

 Edmonton. 



1892. Tyrrell, J. B. The Winter Home of the Barren Ground Caribou. 



Ottawa Naturalist, VI, pp. 128-130. 



General notes on the species, mainly relating to the country south- 

 east of Athabaska Lake. 



1893. Dowlixg, D. B. Narrative of a Journey in 1890, from Great Slave Lake 



to Beechy Lake, on the Great P'ish River. From the journal of .James 

 McKinley, officer in charge at Fort Resolution, H. B. Co. < Ottawa 

 Naturalist, VII, pp. 85-92, 101-114. 



Short description of the region visited in 1889 and 1890 by Warbur- 

 ton Pike, with extracts from the journal of James MacKinlay, who ac- 

 companied Pike in 1890. Zoological notes occupy pp. 107-109. 

 1893. McConxell, R, G. Report on a Portion of the District of Athabasca, 

 comprising the Country between Peace River and Athabasca River 

 north of Lesser Slave Lake. <Annual Report Geological Survey of 

 Canada, V (new ser.), 1889-90-91. Part D, pp. 1D-67D. With a Map 

 and two Sections. 



A geological and general description of the region from explorations 

 and surveys along the Peace and Athabaska rivers and their principal 

 tributaries. 



1893. Ogilvie, William. Report on the Peace River and Tributaries in 1891. 



<Ann. Rept. Dept. Interior (Canada) for 'the year 1892 (Sessional 

 Papers No. 13), Part VII, pp. 1-A4. 



This report contains a large amount of varied information regarding 

 the Liard, Nelson, and Peace rivers, including many notes on the 

 fauna, and in addition many notes regarding other portions of the 

 region, mainly taken from the journal of James MacKinlay, who accom- 

 panied Warburton Pike to the Barren Grounds northeast of Great 

 Slave Lake in 1890. 



