208 
Letters, Announcements, ^c. 
which follows the forest-clad range of mountains into Arakan 
and Burmah^ migrating as certain fruits on which they feed 
come to perfection. Tickell mentions it as a rare bird in 
Tenasserim ; and as they are generally found in the loftiest 
parts of the forest_, they are most difficult to find^ and very 
difficult to shoot. Mr. O. Limhorg failed to secure a speci¬ 
men when he was collecting there in 1877. 
If my conclusions regarding this bird be correct^ then the 
synonymy will be as follows :— 
Anorhinus tickelli, Blyth, J. A. S. B. xxiv. pp. 266-285 
(1855), xxviii. p. 412 (1859). 
Toccus tickelli, Blyth; Tickell, Ibis, 1864, p. 173. 
Anorhinus galeritus, Temm.; Austen, J. A. S. B. xxxix. 
p. 96 (1870). 
Anorhinus austeni, Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p. 6. 
Craniorrhinus corrugatus, Temm.; Blyth, J. A. S. B. xliii. 
extra no. p. 69 (1875). 
Referring the question of the head to Lord Tweeddale, he 
writes to me as follows :—I remember the head perfectly. 
It was in one of your tin boxes, along with some of the larger 
birds. I think its name, whatever that name was, is written 
in pencil on the skulL^*. This head has got somehow mis¬ 
laid. I trust still to find it, and clear up what Blyth wrote 
about it. It has no relation whatever to No. 146 c. 
Yours &c., 
H. H. Godwin-Austen, Lt.-Col. 
We record with regret the decease of Mr. Joachim John 
Monteiro, C.M.Z.S., at Lourevco Marques, Delagoa Bay. 
Although not a professed naturalist, Mr. Monteiro did much, 
during his eighteen years^ residence in Angola, to make known, 
by observations and collections, the ornithology of that 
country. Several papers referring to his collections have 
been published in the Zoological Society's ^ Proceedings.^ In 
1875 Mr. Monteiro published an interesting volume entitled 
^ Angola and the River Congo,^ which gives some account of 
his adventures in those countries. 
^ “ Blyth saw the head when he came to Chislehurst with the MS. 
of his Burmese paper.” 
