LIST OF NORFOLK BIRDS. 
2G9 
nest, wliicli was in a garden, and obtained an egg, which, liowevcr, 
is no longer in existence.* There is rea.son to suppose that it has 
also nested at Ornicsby. The eggs in the collection of the late 
INlr. Scales, said to have been taken at Beechamwell, were taken by 
himself in Holland, as that gentleman informed Professor Kewton. 
31. DirrER {Cindus aquaticiis). 
A well-marked specimen of tlie Common Dipper, or "Water 
Ouzel, in the collection of the llev. C. J. Lucas, was shot on 
IJrcydon Wall in 1819. This, and one killed at Ilellesdon, now 
in the Korwich Museum, are the only occurrences of the English 
Dipper in Norfolk which arc free from doubt. 
35. Bl.vck-relliei) Difi’ER {Cinclus mdanogaster). 
An occasional, almost an annual, visitant from Scandinavia ; 
generally occurring in November. 
3G. White’s 'X.wwm'aw (Turdus varius). 
A male of this beautiful Asiatic straggler, now in the 
llev. S. Micklethwait’s collection, was killed on the 10th October, 
1871, by iMr. F. Borrett, at llickling. 
37. ^Mistletoe Thrush {Turdus visavorus). 
A common resident. There can hardly be a doubt that this 
species receives a large accession to its numlxirs in the autumn 
by arrivals from the North of Europe, most of which go further 
south should the weather be severe, but in no case has Mr. Gurney 
received its wings from the keepers of the light-ships round 
the coast. ^Ir. Booth, however, received two wings from the 
T.ynn Well light, which had been taken in the latter part of 
the winter of 1882. — S. 
38. Song Thrush {Titrdus musicus). 
Common, and generally distributed in the summer months. In 
October and November this species receives immense additions to 
its numbers by foreign arrivals, and whilst Partridge shooting along 
the coast in that month, !Mr. Gurney has been perfectly amazed at 
the numbers found in the turnips. It is probable that a portion of 
* ‘ Catalogue of the Dyke Road Museum at Brighton,’ bj' E. T. Booth 
(p. 141). Mr. Booth’s fine collection at Brighton contains many Norfolk 
rarities. 
