Page:The Zoologist, 4th series, vol 3 (1899).djvu/472

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
442
THE ZOOLOGIST.

Eynsham, in the winter of 1893; in the possession of Mr. Curtis. One killed in the same winter on Port Meadow; in the possession of Mr. Greenwood, of St. Giles Street. Another in the same winter on Port Meadow; preserved for an undergraduate of Keble College. One killed in the winter of 1895-96 on the Isis, at Oxford. One killed at Newbridge in January, 1896; in the possession of Mr. George Kent, of Newbridge.

Mr. A. H. Cocks reported in 'The Zoologist' that eight adult Sandwich Terns passed the greater part of the 10th April, 1895, at Great Marlow, going in the afternoon about three-quarters of a mile up the river (vide 1895, p. 190). These birds were not far from our borders.

(To be continued.[1])

  1. See vol. 4 (1900), p. 11—[Wikisource ed.]