APPENDICES. 
These are usually bound in eight volumes, according to the title 
pages in an extraordinary manner, as follows : 
Vol. I. including Mons. 1, 15, 25 and 32. Vol. II. including Mons. 
11, 12, 2, 13, 4, 5, 6, 3, 7, 8, 9, 10, Resume general Aves rapaces and 36. 
Vol. III. including Mons. 26, 38, 18, 19, 17, 39, 14 and 37. Vol. IV. 
for Mons. 35, 34 and 29. Vol. V. covers Mons. 27, 30, 28, 16 and 20. 
Vol. VI. for Mons. 31, 22, 23, 24, 21 and 33. Vol. VII. for 40 = Simiae 
and Vol. VIII. for 41 = Tinami. 
The reason for this is unknown to me, as Vol. I. is reviewed in the 
Ibis for January 1863, p. 105, as consisting of the first six monographs, 
and there is a preface included dated Oct. 30, 1862. 
ScHRANCK. FauTWb Boica, Vol. I. 1798 pref. dated July 20, 1797 
II. 1801 March 12, 1801 
III. 1803 Nov. 8, 1802 
ScopoLi. Annus Hist, Nat., I. 1769; II. 1769; III. 1769; IV. 1770; 
V. 1772. 
Introd. Hist. Nat., 1777. 
Selby. Author of works on British Birds, collaborated with Jardine 
(which see) in the Illustrations Ornithology. Wrote the volume of the 
Naturalists'^ Library (Jardine) dealing with Pigeons, published May 1835. 
Seebohm. Famous worker on British Birds, wrote Monograph on 
Warblers and Thrushes ui Gat. Birds Brit. Mus. (which see), and Mono- 
graphs on Thrushes and Plovers. 
Sharpe, R. B. Wrote Monograph Kingfishers in 1872-3. Author of 
half the monographs in the Catalogue of the Birds in the British Museum 
(which see), and a Handlist Genera Species Birds B.M., which, lacking 
original references, has not taken the place in systematic ornithology which 
it otherwise would. 
Sharpe completed Gould’s Birds of New Guinea and published other 
Monographs and numerous papers in the Ibis, etc. 
Attention must here be called to the Hist. Coll. Nat. Hist. Brit. Mus., 
Vol. II., 1906, wherein Sharpe dealt with the Bird Collections an(^ took 
the opportunity of reviewing the paintings made by Forster, Ellis, and 
Watling in that Institution. The Watling drawings all represent Austrahan 
birds, and were examined by Latham and became the basis of many species. 
Hence the review given by Sharpe is a most important contribution, and is 
here again referred to as it was not included in the Zoological Record for 1906. 
Collaborated with Wyatt in Monograph of the Swallows, 1885-1894. 
Shaw. Museum Leverianum. Pubhshed in parts according to dates on 
VOL. vn. 
465 
