GEOPHAPS SCRIPTA. 
Partridge Bronze-wing. 
- ; rd : . war = 2 a 7 
Columba scripta, Temm. Pl. Col. 187; and in Linn, Trans., vol. xiii. p. 127—Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool., 
vol. xiv, p. 284. 
Geophaps scripta, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc.. February 8, 1842,—G. R. Gray, Appendix to Gen. of Birds, p. 12 
Tris Pigeon bas more than ordinary claims to the attention both of the ornithologist and the epicure, since 
to the first it is of interest as being a typical example of a minor group of the Colmabide, whose habits 
aud economy are very peculiar, and to the second as a most delicate yiand for the table. Tt is, unquestion- 
ably, the best bird I ate while in Australias and, in my opinion, it is second to none in any other part of 
the world: the quality of its flesh is so superior to that of the Common Bronze-wing, that the latter cannot 
for a moment be put in comparison with it; for, as in the Wonga-wonga Pigeon, another most excellent bird 
for the table, both the upper and under pectoral muscles are white, juicy and delicately flavoured, while in the 
Common Brouze-wing the upper muscle is brown, It is to be regretted that a bird possessing such high 
qualifications as an article of food should be so exclusively a denizen of the plains of the interior that it is 
available to few except inland travellers. It is equally interesting to the sportsman, no other bird not strictly 
gallinaceous offering so close a resemblance to the members of the genus Perdex (Partridges) in many of 
its habits and manners as does the Partridge Bronze-wing ; and I conceive that in no instance is the theory 
of the analogical relationship of one group to another more strikingly borne out than m the close resem- 
blance of the members of this group to those of the genus Perdir. 
When on the ground it has so much the carriage and actions of a Partridge that it might readily be 
mistaken for one. [sometimes observed it in pairs, but more frequently in small coveys of trom four to six 
in number, which, when approached, instead of seeking safety by flight, ran off with exceeding rapidity in an 
opposite direction, and crouched down either on the bare plain or among any scanty herbage that appeared 
to offer the least shelter, It is withal so excessively tame, that it is not unfrequently killed by the bullock- 
drivers with their whips, while passing along the roads with their teams. The colouring of the bird assimi- 
lates so closely to that of the ground or the herbage, that when crouched down for shelter it is not easily to 
be seen, and they will often lie until it is all but trodden upon. It rises with extreme rapidity, making a loud 
burring noise with the wings and generally spinning off, not, as might be supposed, to another part of the 
plain, but to the horizontal branch of a large tree, on which it immediately squats down quite flat, in the 
same line with the branch, from which it is not easily distinguished or driven off. The shortness of its 
wings gives it much the appearance of a Partridge during flight, and it also assimilates in the arrow-like 
direction of its course to the nearest tree, terminating with a skimming motion of the wings before alighting. 
The nearest point to the colony of New South Wales in which T met with this bird was the Liverpool 
Plains, from whence to as far as I proceeded on the Lower Namoi its numbers appeared to increase. [ have 
also heard from other travellers that it is equally abundant on all the plains and banks of the rivers between 
New South Wales and the Murray im South Australia ; but I have never yet observed it in collections either 
from the northern or western portions of the content, 
The egys are two in number, and are deposited on the bare ground without any nest, The young both 
run and fly strongly when they are only as large as a quail, as I satisfactorily ascertained by killing one 
which rose before mes but at what bird I had fired I had not the slightest conception until I picked it up. 
In speaking of this bird as an inhabitant of the plains, I must not fail to mention that it was far more 
abundant on such as were intersected by rivers and water-holes ; in fact, a good supply of water seemed to 
he essential to its existence. Its chief food is the seeds of various grasses and other small plants, to which 
ave added at some seasons insects and berries. 
Head, all the upper surface and chest light brown, the extremities of the wing-coverts and the edges of 
the primaries being much paler; the outer webs of several of the greater coverts wath a speculum of 
wreenish purple obscured, barred with a darker tint; chin and throat, a broad stripe from the lower 
mandible to beneath the eye, another stripe from the posterior angle of the eye down the side of the neck, 
on the side of the neck snow-white, the interspaces being jet-black, the latter colour sur- 
_ and also forming a crescent across the lower part of the throat; abdomen grey; flanks 
feathers greyish brown at the base and largely tipped with black ; bill 
aud a spot 
rounding the eye 
white; all but the two centre tail-fe 
black: irides black; naked skin surrounding the eye bluish lead-colour; the corners immediately before 
and behind the eye mealy vinous red; feet and frontal seales dark purplish vinous red. 
The figures are of the natural size. 
