294 Messrs. H. Seebohm and J. A. Harvie Brown on 
flocks were seen feeding at or flying along the edges of the 
sand-banks when the tide receded. We supposed that these 
large flocks came from some locality distant from their feeding- 
grounds ; and we noticed that the majority of them arrived 
from the northward. This was on the 14th July. We are 
somewhat at a loss to know whence they came, and where 
their especial breeding-grounds were, unless they came along 
shore from the westward from the tundras of the Timanskai 
land. The Timanskai coast, as we were informed, and the 
whole promontory of Busskai Zavarod are sandy; and this 
information confirms the accounts of the earlier voyagers 
(vide Hakluyt’s f Voyages/ “ Voyage of Steuen Burrough,” 
vol. i. p. 279). Thus it is quite possible that the low-lying 
Golaievkai banks may be the nearest available and suitable 
feeding-grounds for the Dunlins and other Waders which 
breed on the northern parts of the Timanskai ^undra. We 
fired several times into these flocks, but failed to discover any 
immature examples amongst those we killed, as we naturally 
expected to do upon finding such large flocks at this season; 
nor was it, indeed, until some days afterwards that we pro¬ 
cured the first young we had seen, viz. on the 20th July, at 
Vassilkova. 
Tringa mintjta, Leisl. 
The short arctic summer was already far advanced; it was 
the 13th July; and we had almost despaired of reaching the 
breeding-haunts of the Little Stint. During the migration 
of the birds at Ust Zylma, and on our voyage down the river, 
nothing had been seen of the species, though every passing 
“trip” of Temminck’s Stint had been eagerly scrutinized, 
and many birds shot for identification. We made a point of 
shooting every Stint about which we had the least doubt. 
Clearly there were no Little Stints on any of the islands, nor 
at any point visited by us between Ust Zylma and the sea; 
and clearly also they had not migrated past Ust Zylma. One 
of two things remained for us to do—either to induce M. 
Arendt to allow us the use of the river-steamer to visit the 
distant island of Varandai, near the eastern entrance to the 
