ADDENDA*. 
r T i HE following Accounts are taken out of Voyages , and relate to the King of the 
Vultures , Page 2 of this Book y and they coming to hand after the Defcripti- 
ons were printed, I have placed them here. 
Navarette in his Voyages in Spanijh , Page 30©, mentions Rey de les Zopilotes, tran¬ 
slated in Churchill's ColleElwn of Voyages, Vol. 1. Page 235, where he fays, “ That 
“ at Acapulco he faw the King of the Zopilotes , which are the fame we call Vultures 
“ it is one of the fineft Birds that may be feen. I have often heard it prais’d, and 
“ as I thought, they over-did it; but when I faw the Creature, I thought, the De- 
“ fcription far Short of it.” 
Navarette in another Place of the above Translation, Page 46. fpeaks thus: “ But 
“ the gayeil; and fineft Bird I have feen, is the King of the Copilotes , which I faw 
“ Several times in the Port of Acapulco , and never had enough of looking at him, 
“ Still more and more admiring his Beauty, Statelinefs and Grace.” This Spanijh , 
Author has ufed z and c indifferently in the beginning of the Name, they founding 
equally and meaning the fame Bird. 
Sir Hans Sloane favour’d me with thefe Remarks, and we think, that they can re¬ 
late to no other Bird but the King of the Vultures defcribed in Page 2. What is now 
mentioned may ferve pretty certainly to fix his native Place, which before we did not 
know. 
The 
