[ 4x8 ] 
Anas. 50. Glacialis. 203. 30, and Hyemalis, 20 2. 
29. Edw. t. 156. Swallow-tail. Br. Zool. 
Faun. Am. Sept. 17. 
Churchill River, N° 12. 
At Churchill River the Indians call this fpecies, 
Har-har-vey •, it correfponds with Edwards’s 
defcription and drawing, plate 156, but dif- 
fers much from Linneus’s inexadt defcription 
of the Anas Hyemalis, to which he, how- 
ever, quotes Edwards. Upon the whole it is 
almoft without a doubt that the bird repre- 
fented by Edwards, plate 280, and Br. Zool.. 
folio, plate Q^_7, and quoted by Linneus for 
his Anas glacialis, is the male, and that the 
bird figured by Edwards t. 1 56, and quoted by 
Linneus for the Anas Hyemalis, is the female, 
of one and the fame fpecies. Linneus men- 
tions a white body (in his Anas hyemalis) 
which in Edw. Tab. 156, and in the So- 
ciety’s fpecimen, is all brown and duiky, ex- 
cept the belly, temples, a fpot on the back 
of the head, and the fides of the rump, 
which are white. Linneus fays, that the 
temples are black; in the fpecimen now fent 
over, and in Mr. Edwards’s figure, which. 
Linneus quotes, they are white ; the bread:, 
back,, and wings,, are not black as he fays, 
but rather brown and dufky. A further 
proof, that Linneus’s Anas Glacialis and Hye- 
malis are the fame, is that the feet in both 
t. 156 and 280 of Edwards are red, and the 
bill black, with an orange fpot.. 
Anas.. 
