90 
TURBINE. 
TURDUS. 
darker j quills and tail-feathers dusky, the outer webs of the latter 
tinged with grey, and their tips white ; lore dusky ; a band of reddish- 
orang’e from over the fore part of the eye down the side of the neck ; 
two conspicuous bands of the same crossing the wing obliquely, being 
formed by the tips of the first row of small coverts, and those of the 
secondary coverts ; outer webs of primary coverts about the middle, 
a band on the primaries near the base, part of their outer webs towards 
the end, and the tips of the secondaries pale reddish-orange ,* lower 
parts light reddish-orange, paler behind ; a band of greyish-black 
passing down the side of the neck, and a belt of the same crossing its 
lower part ; feathers of the sides tipped with bluish-grey ; those of 
the middle of the abdomen white ; lower tail-coverts tipped with’, 
white ; axillar feathers white, tipped with grey, smaller coverts grey, 
tipped with reddish- white ; primary coverts grey, secondary nearly 
white. Female similar, with the upper parts tinged with olive-brown, 
the reddish-orange bands much paler, the tail-feathers margined with 
dull reddish-brown ; a band on the lore down the sides of the neck 
and across it light greyish-brown ; the orange tints of the lower parts 
much paler. 
Male, 101, wing, 51. Female, 10, wing 5^®^. 
Columbia River, North California, and Fur Countries. Abundant. 
Migratory. 
Orpheus meruloides, Thriish-like Mock-Bird, Swains. & Rich. F. Bor. Amer. v. ii. 
p. 187. 
Varied Thrush, Turdus nesvius, Aud. Orn. Biog. v. iv. p. 489 ; v. v. p. 284. 
144, 3. Turdus mustelinus, Gmel. Wood-Thrusli. 
Plate L XXIII. Male and Female. 
Upper parts light yellowish-brown, the head and hind neck of a tint 
approaching to reddish-orange; the rump and tail-coverts duller and of 
an olivaceous tint ; quills and tail-coverts light olive-brown, the outer 
webs of the coverts and quills like the back ; eyes margined with a 
whitish circle ; lower parts white, anteriorly tinged with yellow, the 
sides and lower part of the neck, the fore part of the breast, and the 
sides of the body marked with large roundish or broadly ovato-tri- 
angular decided brownish-black spots. 
Male, 8, 13. 
From Texas to Nova Scotia, and throughout the interior. Many 
spend the winter in Louisiana, Florida, and Texas. Abundant. 
Wood Thrush, Turdus melodus, Wils. Amer. Orn. v. i. p. 35. 
Turdus mustelinus, Bonap. Syn. p. 75. 
Wood Thrush, Turdus mustelinus, Nutt. Man. v. i. p. 343. 
Wood Thrush, Turdus mustelinus, Aun. Orn. Biog. v. i. p. 372 5 v. v. p. 446. 
145. 4. Turdus Wilsoni^ Bonap. Tawny Thrush. 
Plate CLXVI. Male. 
Wings with the third quill largest, the fourth scarcely shorter, and 
