( ij6 ) 
Gent tana Virgtniana, Saponarite folio, flore cee- 
ruleo longiore. Hift. Oxon. III. 184. Ico.Tab. 5 . § 11* 
71. Pluvialis vociferus. The Chattering Plover. 
In Virginia they are called Kildeers , from fome Re- 
femblance of their Noife to the Sound of that Word. 
Frutex foliis oblongis acuminatis , floribus fpi - 
eat is mo verfu difpojitis. The Sorrel Tree. 
7X. Morinellus Marinus of Sirj 'Thomas Bronson. 
An Cinclus Turneri ? Willoughby, p. 3 11. 
The Turn-Stone or Sea-Dottrel. This Bird has 
its Name from its Praftice of turning up Stones of 
two or three Pound-weight, in order to find Infects 
and Worms under them. It is a Native both of Eng- 
land and America . 
Arbor maritima , foliis conjugatis Pyri-formibus 
apice in fummitate nffrutfis, jloribus racemops 
luteis- 
73. Phoenicopterus Bahamenjis . The Flamingo. 
Thefe Birds will not fly away at the Report of a 
Gun, and when one is killed, all the reft ftand about 
him, gazing on ; fo that one may kill feveral one 
after another. 
Keratophyton dichotomum fufcum. 
74. Caput Phoenicopteri naturalis magnitudinis. 
The Head of the Flamingo in its full Dimenfions. 
Our Author fays, that when they feed, they 
bend down their Necks, fo that they lay the 
upper part of their Bills next the Ground, and 
that they get a round fort of Grain like Millet out of 
the Mud, as he hath been informed, and that it is 
doubted whether they prey on Filh and Eels, as hath 
been thought. Dr. James Douglas hath given an 
ample 
