28 
AVES. 
of their soft parts. The number of species previously known 
from the locality is increased by SQ 
/ 
Stanley, H. M. How I found Livingstone. Travels, Adven- 
tures, and Discoveries in Central Africa. London : 1872. 
8vo, pp. xiv, 736. 
( Contains very few notes on birds, beyond a passing allusion 
to Indicator (p. 353)^ 
UssHER, H. T. [See Sharpe, R. B.] 
INDIAN REGION. 
Anderson, A. Notes on the Raptorial Birds of India. [See 
Accipitres.^^] 
^Ball, V. Notes on a collection of Birds made in the Andaman 
Islands by Assistant-Surgeon G. E. Dobson during the 
months of April and May. J. A. S. B. xli. pp. 273-290. 
An interesting paper, eclipsed by a subsequent one of the 
author ^tray Feathers, i. pp. 5I-90Q j^new species {Campe- 
phagidd^^ describe^ 
^Blanpord, W. T. Account of a visit to the Eastern and 
Northern Frontiers of Independent Sikkim, with Notes on 
the Zoology of the Alpine and Subalpine regions. — Part II. 
Zoology. J. A. S. B. 1872, pp. 30-73. 
Contains the zoological portion of the paper noticed last year 
(Zool. Rec. viii. p. 38), and describes more fully the new species 
there mentioned./ 
-- — . Notes on a collection of Birds from Sikkim. Tom. cit. 
pp. 152-170, pis. vii., viii. 
Excellent [notes on many rare species, three of which are new 
i^nmcliidoi, Sylviiddi, Fnngillidce) .) 
/Blyth, E. Letter from. Ibis, 1872, pp. 87-90. 
(Besides some corrections of names of Indian birds, the writer 
gives a list of birds collected by Griffith, probably in the Khasia 
hills and not in Afghanistan, as stated by Messrs. Horsfield and 
Moore (Cat. E.-I. Mus.).^ 
i Brooks, W. E. Notes on the Ornithology of Cashmir. J. A. 
S. B. xli. pp. 73-86. 
(Contains short but interesting observations, and six new 
species (Certhiidae, SylvUda, Motacillidce, and Alaudid(e).j 
/ 
On two undescribed Cashmir Birds [Sylviidds] 
cit. pp. 327-329. 
Tom. 
. The Imperial Eagles of India [Falconid(B], P. A. S. B. 
1872, pp. 64, 65. 
