20 
Natural History of the Queen Charlotte Islands, by Wilfred Osgood, U.S. Department of 
Agriculture, Bureau of Biological Survey, North American Fauna, No. 21, 1901. 
Birds, pp. 38-50. 
Biological Investigations in Alaska and Yukon Territory, by Wilfred H. Osgood, U.S. 
Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Biological Survey, North American Fauna 
No. 30, 1909. 
Results of a Biological Reconnaissance of the Yukon River Region, by Wilfred H. Osgood 
and Louis B. Bishop, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Biological Survey, 
North American Fauna, No. 19, 1900. 
Birds Collected or Observed on the Expedition of the Alpine Club of Canada to Jasper Park, 
Yellow-head Pass, and Mount Robson Region, by J. H. Riley, The Canadian Alpine 
Journal, pp. 47-75, 1912. 
Addenda to Birds of Jasper Park, by P. A. Taverner, The Canadian Alpine Journal, 1918, 
pp. 62-69. 
A Distribution List of the Birds of British Columbia, by Allan Brooks and Harry S. 
Swarth, Cooper Ornithological Club, Pacific Coast Avifauna No. 17, being Contribu- 
tion No. 423 from the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology of the University of California, 
1925. This is a list of all the species and subspecies of birds known to occur in 
British Columbia, with full detailed distributions. 
Besides these works on particular Canadian areas there are numbers 
on adjoining localities of special interest to nearby Canadian observers. 
Among them are: 
A Preliminary Survey of the Bird Life of North Dakota, by Norman A. Wood, University 
of Michigan, Museum of Zoology, Miscellaneous Publications No. 10, Ann Arbor, 
Michigan, 1923. 
A Distributional List of the Birds of Montana, by Aretas A. Saunders, Cooper Ornithological 
Club, Pacific Coast Avifauna No. 14, Berkeley, California, 1921. 
The Birds of Washington, by Wm. Leon Dawson, British Columbia Edition with Supple- 
mentary matter by Allan Brooks. The Occidental Publishing Company, Seattle, 
Washington, 1909. 
This contains a large number of coloured and uncoloured illustrations and much 
life-history, in a very entertaining form. 
Ornithology, like other branches of science, has its own periodicals. 
The chief of these in North America is the “Auk,” a quarterly magazine, 
the official organ of the American Ornithologists’ Union. In addition to 
purely scientific papers, it contains hundreds of articles of interest to 
Canadians, including local lists copiously annotated with life-history notes 
from all over the Dominion and descriptions of habits popularly discussed. 
Subscription $3 a year. Editor, beginning 1912, Witmer Stone, Academy 
of Science, Philadelphia, Pa. 
The “Condor,” a bi-monthly magazine of Western Ornithology, the 
official organ of the Cooper Ornithological Club. Edited by Joseph 
Grinnell, Berkeley, California. Subscription in Canada $3.25 a year. 
Address W. Lee Chambers, Business Manager, Eagle Rock, California. 
This is a well edited and beautifully illustrated periodical devoted to the 
study of western birds and contains much of popular as well as scientific 
interest. 
“Bird-lore” is a popular, monthly magazine notable for its beautiful 
make-up and illustrations. It is the official organ of the National Audubon 
Societies and is devoted to the popular study and protection of birds; it 
is edited by Frank Chapman. Subscription in Canada $1.75 a year. 
Address, Bird-lore, Crescent and Mulberry streets, Harrisburg, Pa. 
The “Canadian Field Naturalist,” the continuation of the “Ottawa 
Naturalist,” is a monthly (nine numbers a year) published by the Ottawa 
Field Naturalists’ Club. Subscription $1.50 a year. Address B. A. Fauvel, 
