OHNITHOLOGICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
215 
French zoological navigators, particularly those of the 
Coquille, already noticed. Of the species discovered by 
Forster and sir Joseph Banks, inserted m I*'’- 
tham’s Synopsis, very few can now he referred to their 
modern genera ; so that in effect they become, hke many 
hundreds of others in the same predicament, — nominal 
species. 
List of the chief Geographic Ornithological Works, 
• arranged under the Five Zoological Provinces. 
1. Europe. 
Temminck. Manuel d’Ornill.ologie, ou Tableau Syst&na- 
tique des Oiseaux qui se trouveiiten Europe, &e. l a • 
Temminck. Second Edition. Pans, 1820 . 2 vol. 8vo. 
Gould. J. The Birds of Europe. Royal folio. Now m course 
ScS“ Rl“ions of British Onmhology. Jo two Serte, 
vil the Land and Water Birds. London, 1S21-1824. lin 
perial folio. (Plates only.) . 
Selby. Illustrations of British Ornithology; containing the De- 
scriptioiisof the Birds of Great Britain. London, 1825, &c. 
Mmtagu^''°brnithological Dictionary; or Alphabihical Sy- 
™opls of British Birds, by Geo. Montagu, F L. S. Lon- 
don, 1802. 2 vol. 8vo. Supplement to ditto. 1 vol. 
^ Ttm ua^es of this work are, unfortunately, not numbered ; 
the first volume contains one coloured plate ; the supplement 
has twenty-four others uucoloured. 
2. Asia. 
Le Vaillant. Ilistoire Naturelle d’une parlie d’Oiseaux nou- 
veaux et rares de I’Amfrique et des Indes. Par Francois 
Le Vaillant. Tom. 1. Paris, 1801. 4to. korty-n me col- 
loured plates. , , . ^ 
Tills was the only volume published. It contains tw™ • ' 
four plates and descriptions of hornbills, the last bemfe 
Fhileilon ccmiiculatus, which is the Meliphagous , j 
tive of the Ilvcerulo!. The remainder of the volume is 
to the Anipelidcp. or fruit-eaters of America. . , 
Horsfield. Zoological Researches in Java and the nei^no - 
ing Islands. By Thos. Horsfield, M.D- ““ ’ 
1824. I vol. 4to. 
