4. Falco sacer, Font. McFarlane’s Gerfalcon. — Through the 
kindness of Mr. John Wallace I procured a handsomely-mounted speci- 
men of this bird, which had been shot at Pond Quogue, Long Island, by 
William Lane, in 1877, and which was presented by Mr. Lane to a taxi- 
dermist at Riverhead, by whom it was mounted. This bird has been 
examined by Mr. George A. Lawrence and Mr. Robert Ridgway, and 
pronounced to be an adult male of this variety. The markings are very 
distinct, and much darker than those of a Falco sacer in the American 
Museum at Central Park, New York. 
/ f i , 
Bull N.O.O, 5, April, 1880, p, //7. 
is <-■ ' vd fLuA 
Dutcher, Bare Long Island Birds. 
a. is-) ■( . r s /- 
9 f - 
tA'. 4 
‘Hierofalco Islandicus {Sabine). Jer. Falcon.”— R ecorded bv Mr 
George N. Lawrence* in his list, in the following words : “This species is 
of rare occurence in our vicinity. A beautiful specimen, not quite adult, 
was most liberally presented to me by our fellow member Mr. John Ak- 
hurst, taxidermist, ofBrooklyn ; it was killed on Long Island in the winter 
of 1856.” Subsequently Mr. Lawrence informed me that the specimen in 
the Long Island Historical collection had been presented by him and was 
the one referred to above. 
1 Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist., Vol. VIII, 1S66, p. 280. 
l/j rAi-A AAirx/y 
'X, 
Str fa y CcxAA: 
Auk X. July, 1893 p 274-6. 
/ A J ^ ^ 
f 
j[). £ 
a 
ff ULAAt/ 
Z7 1*. tF 
A^Lj 
trt*- 
[ L -f a A 
Ai£ <m? v. c ^o . 
ft 1,0- / ■ / Twot-cT s/n t, { 
Gaa 
- Ar>rLy 
FiJ utAC ' cf-h-^FC— ^0-rXi si , 
f < C\a3\ai~^ ^ c - 
yis^k- A_ /,'jts^, Y ( /o t/vf 
— . cxasA. rt'Ler&y lot# 
(Ulx- ov4t)bc 
fin 
v, ~ /. ~ ~ w *- w <- « — a aJL* 
1 UrJ ^ tU^^CT a 
UUAAL > loJy dU^M , 4c0/^J aM> jL^z, 
G1 V, /f // 7 
d*'<l A' ’. * A / cL* a4" 
VA &A-T- - 
/J - — 7 c 
7^ 
Y Axa-^ax A. 
^ ,n ' A; 
Ay <wv£T >v 
o.ybx t~ ~l TZ AAasxx J lA " /J '- 
cA-^al, 
0 ~~}r 
( 
~ ‘A* 'A‘~~ 
-eA/ 
l I Src. AL>. 
tS — j- i , 
CAnr^Jtsx fts^Ax^Y 
t^tuJu,. -A.* 
/<^£T 4 *ui Ax'J^sC't 
w ^ua J> ^ ^ ^ 
UMuXT' XAxXl ^ 
gjA 
yv 
(ft 
