40 PROCEEDINGS: BOSTON SOCIETY NATURAL HISTORY. 
Adelonycteris fuscus (Beauv.). 
“The brown bat is rare at Mount Forest” (Brooks). 
There is a specimen of this bat in the U. S. Nat. Mus. (Dept, of 
Auric. Collection) taken at Toronto. 
o ' 
Lasionycteris noctivagans (LeConte). 
Not common at Mount Forest (Brooks). 
Atalapha cinerea (Beauv.). 
Mr. Brooks once found a dead hoary bat at Milton. 
Mentioned by Gapper in his list of the mammals of Upper Canada. 
Atalapha noveboracensis (Erxl.). 
I shot two red bats at North Bay during the latter part of August. 
Cariacus virginianus (Bodd.). 
Deer are very numerous at North Bay, where I saw many heads 
and antlers. 
“ At Mount Forest almost exterminated some years ago but now 
increasing in numbers. All killed off at Milton many years ago ” 
(Brooks). 
Mentioned by Gapper in 1830 among the mammals occurring in 
the region between York and Lake Simeoe. 
Alce americanus Jardine. 
Moose are locally common about North Bay, where I saw a num¬ 
ber of antlers and mounted heads. On the north shore of Lake 
Superior I was told that the moose is occasionally found, but as a 
rare straggler only. 
Rangifer caribou Aud. & Bach. 
Caribou are very abundant on the north shore of Lake Superior, 
where they replace the deer and moose of the Canadian zone. I 
saw heads, antlers, and jaws of caribou at White River, Peninsula 
Harbor, Schreiber, and Nepigon. 
A wet pasture among the hills a mile or more northeast of Penin¬ 
sula Harbor is a favorite feeding ground of these animals. Their 
fresh foot prints, resembling cattle tracks, were to be found every 
