ANTHUS OBSCURUS. 
Rock Pipit. 
Alauda ohscura, Lath. Ind. Orn., vol. ii. p. 494. 
Spipola ohscura, Leach, Syst. Cat. of Indig. Mamm. and Birds in Brit. Mus., p. 22. 
Alauda petrosa, Mont, in Trans. Linn. Soc., vol. iv. p. 41. 
Anthus obscurus, Keys, et Bias. Wirbelth. Eur.,p. 48. 
petrosus, Flem. Hist. Brit. Anim., p. 74. 
rupestris, Nilss. Orn. Suec., tom. i. p. 245, tab. 9 ? 
immutabilis, Degl. ? 
The visitor to the sea-side of almost any portion of our coast cannot tread the beach for an hour without 
springing the Rock Pipit, a bird which will be easily recognized by its jerking shuffling flight, and by the 
short cry of pepe, pepe,^’ which it utters while in the air. If watched, it will be seen to settle again at no 
great distance from the spot whence it started, and the observer will not fail to notice that its long legs and 
toes enable it to run nimbly over the surface of the round slippery stones, patches of soft mud, and masses of 
hard rock fallen from the neighbouring cliff, all of which are conspicuous features in the true home of the 
Rock Pipit. In such situations it resides from year’s end to year’s end, despite of frost, sleet, rain, or the 
wind-blown salt spray of the ocean. 
In my account of the Tawny Pipit, I remarked upon the similarity in the colour of its plumage to that of 
the sandy situations it frequents, namely, open sterile districts, and such hot and parched situations as 
occur in many parts of France, Spain, and Italy ; and a similar correspondence in hue is also observable 
in the sombre olive-coloured plumage of the present bird, and the kelp and oozy mud-flats upon which it 
lives. 
So widely is this bird distributed over our shores that it may be found in all suitable situations from 
Cornwall to the Orkneys, from the most eastern part of England to Wales and the extreme west of 
Ireland. An exception, however, to this general distribution occurs with regard to the county of Nor- 
folk ; for Mr. Stevenson states that, although he has sought for the bird in every likely locality and at the 
proper season, he has never met with it there, and had seen hut three specimens in the hands of the Norwich 
bird-stuffers. “In the month of February, 1855, a single bird was shown to me (killed near Yarmouth 
during very severe weather) which corresponded with specimens procured by myself in Devonshire and 
Sussex ; and two others in my own collection were secured at one shot on the river’s hank, near St. Mar- 
tin’s Gates, quite close to the city, on the 7th of March, 1864. These were, no doubt, passing over in their 
migratory course, and had paused for a while to rest and feed even in a locality so unusual for a bird whose 
haunts are the ‘ rock-girt shore ’ and the margin of byackish water : Messrs. Gurney and Fisher speak of the 
Rock Pipit as migratory to our coast in autumn ; and Messrs. Paget remarked that ‘ a few are occasionally 
seen at Breydon Wall.’ Mr. Dix informs me that on the brackish margin of the Orwell, near Ipswich, they are 
not uncommon in autumn ; he has killed examples there, and one would naturally expect to find them as 
plentiful in similar situations in our own county.” (Birds of Norfolk, vol. i. p. 169.) Its nest is made in the 
chink of a rock, under a stone, or beside a tuft of grass, and the young remain in the neighbourhood, alfect 
no change of locality, and do not, like the Swallow, migrate to other countries. 
The Rev. Mr. Tristram once brought me some Irish skins of a Rock Pipit which he thought different from 
those ordinarily found on our shores ; the difference they presented, however, if I recollect rightly, was but 
slight, being confined to a greater amount of white on the outer tail-feathers, a feature very marked in the 
Anthus ludomcianm of America; it is possible that they may have been examples of that or some other fawn- 
breasted species in the spotted plumage. 
Besides the shores of the British Islands, this bird is found on those of the Mediterranean in the south, 
and on those of the Baltic in the north ; Mr. Newton informs me that it ev'en occurs round the North 
Cape ; and Mr. R. K. Dresser tells me that Pastor Sommerfelt, in his ‘ Notes on the birds of Varanger 
Fjord,’ remarks that A. obscurus is not uncommon there. It arrives in the beginning of April, and 
is the last songster that leaves about the middle of November. It nests on the fjords, but not so com- 
monly as on the sea-coast. Mr. Dresser found it breeding at Uleahorg, in Finland ; but it is rare there. 
“ Its food,” says Macgillivray, “ consists of insects, larvae, small molluscous animals, and seeds of various 
kinds, in searching for which it mixes with the Meadow Pipits, and sometimes with Snowflakes and Sky 
Larks. In summer, when masses of sea-weed happen to be cast on the shore and become putrid, they find 
among them an abundant supply of larvae ; and at all seasons they frequent the ebb, in order to pick up shell- 
fish and other marine animals, often mingling with Turnstones, Redshanks, and Purres. The flight of this 
