Birds of tliQ Adirondack Resion. 

 C.H,Merria«Q. 



30. Dendroeca blackbu 

 BLER. — Common surame^r n 



ii£E {Gmelin) Baird. Blackburnian Wa 

 ident. Breeds in tall pines. 



Bull. N.O.O. O.Oct. 1881. p. 227 



Arrivals of Mig'y Birds, Bprirg-1BB6, 

 Central Park, N. T. City. A. Q. Fame. Jr. 



1 May 11, Dendroica blachhiirnm, (663). Black- 

 [■ burn's Warbler. 



Q.&O. XI.Aug.l838.p.l2.5 



TTh. R. % ^««47has found two 



1- of the Blackburnian Warbler 

 ClS,-artbereVeln 1866 and one .n 



i l8S7 both unfortunately with youns. 



Oneida Ocnnty, New York 

 William L.Ralpii Ss Bgbert BaW 



Dendroica blackburniae.— Breeds. Mr. Hughes found a nest containing 

 young in Julj, 1887, near Remsen. Julj 16, iSSS, we took a nest about 

 four miles north of Holland Patent, which contained four eggs on the 

 point of hatching. The nest was well concealed in a bunch of small 

 branches, about fifteen feet above the ground, in a spruce tree. It was 

 composed of hemlock and spruce twigs outside, then pine needles and 

 dry grass, and lined with horsehair. The eggs (which we were unable to 

 save, they were so near hatching), were large for the size of the bird, and 

 darker colored than is usual with Warblers' eggs. 



Auk, VII. July, 1890. p, -^^Z' 



Some Birds of Le-wie Co, N,T, 

 O.Hart Mnrriam 



D. Uadchurnue, , 

 Bxill. N.O.O. S.April, 1878. p. 53 



Dendroica blackb' 



common transient 

 n is "tolerabl 

 r but rather ra 



on the Stockbridge East Hills. 



liae. Blackburnian Warbler. — Given only 

 isitant." Mr. Miller states that the Black- 

 " at Peterboro ; and I have found it to be a 

 r resident among hemlocks in mixed woods 



iiuli, XX, July, . 



