710 Recently 'published Ornithological Works. 
102. Salvadori on the Birds of the Duke of the AbruzzVs 
Ruwenzori Expedition. 
[II Iluwenzori, vol. i. Relazioni Scientifici. Uccelli. T. Salvadori.] 
In the Duke of the Abruzzi's famous expedition to Ruwen¬ 
zori little attention was paid to Ornithology, and only 45 
specimens of birds were brought home. These are referred 
by Count Salvadori to 36 species. Four of these species, 
believed to be new, have already been described *. Count 
Salvadori now gives us a list of the whole collection with 
the necessary remarks. 
103. Sharpe and Chubb on Bornean Birds. 
[Notes on a Collection of Birds from Sandakan, N.E. Borneo. By 
R. Bowdler Sharpe, LL.D., and Charles Chubb. Ornis, xiii. p. 137 
(1909).] 
The subject of this paper is a collection made by 
Mr. P. M. Graydon on or near the Lamey Estate on the 
Kinabatangan River, about one hundred miles from Sandakan 
in N.E. Borneo. The district is mostly covered by dense 
jungle and is not more than from 200 to 500 ft. above the 
sea-level. 
After a list of the five principal papers already published 
on the birds of this part of Borneo, the examples of the 
100 species represented in the collection are enumerated and 
discussed. They are mostly well-known Bornean forms. 
A few field-notes are added. 
104. Snethlage on new Amazonian Birds. 
[Novas especies de Aves amazonicas das collec 9 oes do Museu Goeldi. 
Pela Dr. Emilia Snethlage. Bol. Mus. Goeldi, v. p. 437 (1909).] 
Dr. Emilia Snethlage, who is now, if we are correctly 
informed, the head of the Bird-department in the Goeldi 
Museum at Para, describes 16 new species and subspecies of 
Amazonian Birds from specimens in that Museum :— Thalu- 
rania fur cat a intermedia from the Rio Tocantins; Pteroglossus 
* Boll. Mus. Torino, No. 542. Cf ‘ Ibis/ 1907, p. 212. 
