156 
APPENDIX. 
ing any connexion with the district under consideration, but a 
very considerable list, comprising seventy-five distinct species, 
has been added, of birds which have visited the neighbourhood 
at uncertain seasons and in unequal numbers: it will be perfectly 
evident to the naturalist that a considerable number being pure- 
ly oceanic, must be driven so far inland by accidental, although 
perhaps natural, occurrences, and that they must be regarded as 
altogether aliens, a term still more applicable to those exotic 
birds which have on one or two occasions been observed within 
the district. 
Osnrev 
Dottrell 
Bvpnt Gnnsp 
Peregrine Falcon 
Rin0"ed Plnv^pr 
Garganev Duck 
vjrid,y X lUVtJl 
tf;r» TYiTYi r»n Sif»r»fpv 
V/'UIJLllllUlJ OL/UICI 
Od-liUei nug 
OUdup JLyULK 
TTnnpv Tinyynvn 
Smew 
iVldloIl Xltllllcl 
vy'OiiJiiiuii jjitieiii 
vjroobdiiuer 
TTpn T-TjivT*ip'r 
Whitp Stork 
T» prl-npplf'H rrrpViP 
ivi oil Ldgii o xjdiriei 
VV lULe lopUOllUlll 
jLdieu. vjritjue 
Tiittle Owl 
Gln<»<;v This 
(xrpat N^nvthpTTi 
Great Gray Shrike 
Curlew 
Diver 
Pied Flycatcher 
Com. Redshank 
Black-throated 
Golden Oriole 
Green shank 
Diver 
Bearded Tit 
Avocet 
Red-throat'd Diver 
Bohemian Wax- 
Black-wing'd Stilt 
Little Auk 
wing 
Black-tailed God- 
Com. Cormorant 
Rock Pipit 
wit 
Green Cormorant 
Snow Bunting 
Ruff 
Gannett 
Girl Bunting 
Great Snipe 
Common Tern 
Mealy Redpole 
Curlew Sandpiper 
Lesser Tern 
Twite 
Knot 
Black Tern 
Two-barred Cross- 
Dunlin 
Black-head'd Gull 
bill 
Spotted Crake 
Kittiwake 
Nutcracker 
Little Crake 
Common Gull 
Hoopoe 
Gray Phalarope 
Lesser Black- 
Bee-eater 
Red-necked Pha- 
backed Gull 
Rock Dove 
larope 
Herring Gull 
