/leva, flvioU Mtnru, a! <kt£uL . 
£ . (i. &* 
Thus, after the storm, 
Oct 4, 1879, (called the Saxby storm, after 
his prediction), a pair of Pomarine Jsegers 
were seen in Digby Basin, one of which 
was shot. The broad band of clay-blue 
below the black leg and knee, mentioned 
by Audubon was very marked. 
G?.** \/ll- lb T / Vi-2 fv. /n, 
Notes *n Birds of Grand Ben 
3. In Newcomb. - 1S78. 
August 29, off Thatcher’s Island, several Jaegers were seen which 
were thought to be Stercorarius pomatorhinus ., 
Bull. N.O.O. 4, April, 187*. p.127 
Notes on Birds of Grand Ban 
R. L. Netroomb. - 1878, 
Shot to-day eleven S. pomatorhi¬ 
nus, representing two plumages. These birds in the sooty plumage^are known 
as Black Marlingspikes. 
Bull N.O.O. 4, April, 1870, *.128 
Birds within Ten Miles of Point 
de Monts, Can, Oomeau&Merriam 
128. Stercorarius pomatorhinus. Pomatorhine Jaeger. — Rare. 
Bull. N. 0.0. 7, Oct, L882, p! 240 
Birds of N.E. coast of Labrador 
’-v Henry B. Bigelow. 
9. Stercorarius pomarinus. Pomarine Jaeger. Rather rare; much 
less common than the other iaegers. 
Auk, XIX, Jan., 1902, p.26. 
Birds of Toronto, Ontario. 
By James H.Fleming. 
Pt.I, Water Birds. 
Hypothetical List. 
Auk, XXIII, Oct., 1906, p.452. 
3 . Stercorarius pomarinus. Pomarine Jaeger. — I can find no 
specimens and no reliable printed records from anywhere on the Great 
Lakes; the records probably refer to S. parasiticus. 
