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  _Descriptions of Three New Birds from the Belgian Congo._

  BY JAMES P. CHAPIN.

  BULLETIN OF THE
  AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY,
  VOL. XXXIV, ART. XVI, pp. 509-513

  _New York, October 20, 1915._




=Article XVI.=--DESCRIPTIONS OF THREE NEW BIRDS FROM THE BELGIAN
CONGO.

BY JAMES P. CHAPIN.


The whole of the large collection of birds secured by the Congo
Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History during the years
1909 to 1915, under the leadership of Mr. Herbert Lang, has now arrived
safely at the Museum. It is composed of material gathered all across the
Belgian Congo, from Boma on the west to Aba in the northeastern corner,
but the greater part from the more remote territory between Stanley
Falls and the Enclave of Lado, including the dense equatorial forests of
the Ituri, Nepoko, and Bomokandi, and the high-grass and bush country of
the Uele District to the north and northeast.

Of the relatively small number of zooelogical expeditions that have
passed through and collected in these regions, none has ever before
been able to make such a prolonged stay, and the varied zooelogical
results of this Expedition are surely of the highest scientific
interest. The ornithological collection contains in the neighborhood
of six thousand skins, and represents some 600 different species, a
number of them of course new to science. These it is our purpose to
describe as promptly as possible in this Bulletin, before taking up
the greater work of a general report on all the forms collected, with
more extended notes on their distribution, habits, food, and nests.

Descriptions of the first three new forms follow:


=Chaetura melanopygia= sp. nov.

     Related to _C. stictilaema_, but much larger, with feathers of
     upper breast more heavily margined with blackish, and without any
     trace of a light rump-band.

     Description of type, collector's No. 4986 Congo Exp. A. M. N. H.,
     [Male] ad. Avakubi, Ituri District, Belgian Congo, Aug. 15, 1913.

     Upper parts brownish-black (chaetura-black, Ridgw.) becoming black
     on wings and tail, with faint violet and green reflections (green
     on freshly molted feathers). Ear coverts drab, bordered with
     fuscous-black; feathers of throat pale smoke-gray, margined with
     fuscous, those of upper breast similar, but heavily bordered with
     fuscous-black, consequently with a very pronounced "scaly"
     appearance; lower breast growing darker, so that the dark borders
     are less conspicuous, and the feathering of the belly completely
     fuscous-black with slight oily gloss. Under wing coverts
     mouse-gray with darker edges, flanks and under tail-coverts black
     with slight greenish gloss. Tail slightly rounded.

     Iris dark brown, bill black, feet bluish, shading to dusky brown
     on tips of toes and claws. Sexual organs enlarged.

     Length (skin) 145 mm.; wing 164; tail 49.5; bill (exposed
     culmen), 7.5; metatarsus 13.

Only one specimen secured, out of two or three of these swifts that were
flying about over the Ituri River, in company with several examples of
_Chaetura cassini_. In spite of our long stay in this region, the species
was not again positively recognized; but _Chaetura cassini_, _C.
stictilaema_ and _C. sabinei_ were all of common occurrence there.


=Apaloderma minus= sp. nov.

Resembling _Apaloderma narina_, but decidedly smaller, of different
coloration, and with bill less swollen. The serration of the maxilla
is less pronounced.

The adult male of _A. minus_ is distinguished by the bluer hue of the
forehead, throat, and upper breast, which show in certain lights deep
violet reflections, and by the more scarlet, less crimson color of the
remaining underparts. In life the naked areas on the cheeks are bright
yellow, whereas in _A. narina_ they are light green.

The adult female differs in the more tawny or ochraceous coloration of
the breast, which is grayish in this sex of _A. narina_, although
sometimes washed with light brown on the upper breast. A greenish
gloss on the upper breast is more common in females of _A. narina_.

In juvenal plumage both species are entirely buff below, the feathers
more or less tipped with dusky.

     Type: collector's No. 4983. Congo Exp. A. M. N. H. [Male] ad.
     Avakubi Ituri District, Belgian Congo, August 13, 1913.

     _Description of Adult Male_ (type).--Throat, upper breast, lores
     and forehead glossy wall-green, in certain lights with violet
     reflections; upper tail-coverts much the same, but nape and back
     brilliant peacock-green. Lower breast, sides, belly, and under
     tail-coverts bright scarlet-red; feathering of legs dusky, with
     faint green gloss and slightly bordered with whitish. Primaries
     fuscous-black, the outer ones margined with white and the inner
     ones white at the base. Alula and primary-coverts blackish;
     lesser wing-coverts blackish, broadly margined with green; middle
     coverts with less green and vermiculated with white. Greater
     coverts and secondaries blackish vermiculated with white, the
     former narrowly edged with green, the secondaries only very
     faintly. Three middle pairs of rectrices blackish, slightly
     glossed with violet-blue and margined with green; outer three
     pairs white, with bases black faintly glossed with blue, this
     blackish color extending out furthest on inner webs, and finally
     breaking up into small dusky spots.

     Iris red-brown; distal portion of bill light greenish gray, base
     of bill and two naked patches beneath eye light cadmium-yellow,
     naked skin above eye lemon-yellow; bare skin of foreneck (covered
     in life by plumage) light blue; feet pale pink.

     Length (skin) 254 mm.; length of bill (culmen from base) 18 mm.;
     height of bill at nostril 9.5 mm.; greatest width of maxilla, near
     gape, 16 mm.; wing (measured with dividers) 113 mm.; tail 146 mm.

     In some of the other male specimens the green borders on the
     secondaries are lacking, and the exact intensity of the white
     vermiculation is of course variable. The measurements of a series
     of 11 adult males are: bill, 17-18.5 mm.; wing, 108-115.5; tail,
     136.5-151. This is smaller than any _Apaloderma_ heretofore
     described.

     _Adult Female._ Crown, back, and rump brilliant peacock-green,
     upper tail-coverts viridian. Lores, forehead, and ear-coverts
     more brownish; throat and upper breast snuff-brown, sometimes
     with glossy green at sides of neck or a few narrow green borders
     on the chest. Lower breast cinnamon, sometimes finely barred with
     dusky; belly somewhat lighter and rosier than that of male;
     feathering of legs dusky. Tail similar to that of male; but the
     vermiculation on the wing-coverts and secondaries is very much
     finer, and light ochraceous-buff, not white.

     Iris red-brown; naked cheek-patches lemon-yellow, base of bill
     slightly deeper yellow; culmen dusky, bill light green below;
     feet flesh-color, claws gray.

     Measurements of three adult females: bill (culmen from base),
     17-17.5 mm.; wing 104.5-113 mm.; tail, 140-149 mm.

     An _immature male_ has the green of the upper breast broken by
     irregular bars of cinnamon. The lower breast is cinnamon mixed
     with rose, and barred at the sides with green, and shades to
     light scarlet-red on belly and under tail-coverts. The greater
     wing-coverts and three inner secondaries bear each a large spot
     of light ochraceous buff, extending across the whole width of the
     innermost secondary, and most of the secondaries are vermiculated
     or speckled on their outer webs with buff. Just behind the eye
     there is a small spot of white, and the lower edge of the
     ear-coverts is marked by a buff line.

     Iris dark brown; maxilla dusky, but its base greenish-yellow like
     the naked cheek-patches, mandible light yellowish-green, with
     light-gray tip; feet pinkish. Bill, 18.5 mm.; wing, 108; tail, 139.

     A _nestling_ ([Male]), with tail only 25 mm. long, is of a
     yellower green above (calliste green); lores, forehead and entire
     underparts cinnamon-buff, the downy feathers slightly tipped with
     dusky except on abdomen. The wing-coverts and inner secondaries
     bear large spots of buff. Iris brownish-gray; bill very light
     bluish-gray, its base and corners of mouth greenish-yellow; feet
     pale flesh-color, claws gray.

     The spots on the inner secondaries, in the first plumage, appear
     to be much larger in the case of _A. minus_ than with _A.
     narina_, for an immature female specimen of the latter shows only
     rounded spots on the outer webs not exceeding 5.5 mm. in diameter,
     while the additional buffy speckling is practically absent.

This trogon was found by us in the Ituri forest, from the Nepoko River
south to Avakubi and westward to Banalia, but its range is certainly
wider than this. It is a species perfectly distinct from _Apaloderma
narina_, but both occur in the same forests, though the latter was
also to be heard at times in areas of tall second-growth, whereas _A.
minus_ seemed never to leave the primitive uncut forest, and was
extremely shy and difficult to observe. These two trogons may easily
be recognized by their voices, the common note of _A. narina_ being a
double, dove-like "cu-coo," which is repeated slowly for several
seconds, starting faintly but increasing in strength, and accompanied
by a slight wagging of the tail. That of _A. minus_ is a series of
longer, more mournful sounds that might be represented by the word
"kwaw." These calls are given by the males.

As compared with the measurements given in Prof. Reichenow's "Voegel
Afrikas" and the British Museum Catalogue, our specimens of
_Apaloderma narina_ from the Ituri District seem rather small, and may
belong to the race _aequatoriale_ of Dr. Sharpe.

A series of 12 adult males measures: bill (culmen from base) 18.5-21
mm.; wing 117.5-128; tail 146.5-166. The green borders of the
secondaries are never very well marked, and sometimes virtually absent.

Seven females from the same region measure: Bill, 18.5-21; Wing
117.5-129; Tail, 149-169.

One male collected in the Uele District, in a small forest tract
between Faradje and Aba, is strikingly larger; wing, 134; tail 194.
This example is probably referable to _A. n. narina_.


=Ceriocleptes= gen. nov. (Indicatoridae).

     Resembling _Indicator_ in its bill and general form, save for the
     tail, which is composed of 12 quills, the two middle pairs of
     nearly equal length, somewhat pointed and curved strongly
     outwards, the next pair considerably shorter, but also pointed
     and slightly curved; while the fourth, fifth and sixth are
     straight, greatly narrowed, and stiffened, becoming successively
     shorter, so that the outermost pair is not half so long as the
     median. The tail-coverts are unusually long, those below as long
     as the longest rectrices, and projecting in the fork of the tail.


=Ceriocleptes xenurus= sp. nov.

     Description of type, collector's No. 5628, Congo Exp. A. M. N. H.
     [Male] ad., Avakubi, Ituri District, Belgian Congo. Apr. 17,
     1914.

     Feathers of forehead, crown, back, and rump blackish-brown,
     bordered or washed with yellowish-citrine, those of nape and
     upper back whitish at the base. Sides of head lighter, shading
     gradually to olive-buff on throat, breast, and sides; middle of
     abdomen still lighter, ivory-yellow. Upper wing-coverts and
     secondaries fuscous-black (freshly molted feathers blacker)
     narrowly edged with olive-ocher. Primaries similar, but yellowish
     border almost entirely lacking; both primaries and secondaries
     fading to pale olive-buff on their inner edges. Under
     wing-coverts colored like the breast, but with faint dusky
     shaft-streaks. Feathering of flanks ivory-yellow, with strong
     blackish median lines. Two middle pairs of rectrices dull
     blackish, 3rd pair whitish, with a small blackish spot on the
     outer edge close to the tip, and a larger concealed black spot on
     the inner web towards the base; the 3 remaining pairs of
     rectrices white. The long median pair of under tail-coverts
     blackish, the next pair similar, but margined with whitish, the
     remainder ivory-yellow with faint shaft-streaks of dark brown.
     Upper tail-coverts fuscous-black, bordered with amber-yellow.[1]

     The bill, nostril, and feet resemble those of _Indicator
     indicator_, but the bill is somewhat stouter, while the wings and
     tail are shorter. The 9th (outer) primary is intermediate in
     length between the 6th and 5th; the 7th and 8th are longest.

     Iris bright brown, naked edges of eyelids grayish-brown; bill
     dusky-brown; feet dull grayish-green.

     Length (skin), 160 mm.; wing, 93.5; tail 56; bill (culmen from
     base), 13.5; metatarsus, 14.

This unique specimen was shot by the describer from a tall tree in the
forest, where it was accompanied by one other of its kind. The sexual
organs were somewhat enlarged; the stomach filled with beeswax, mixed
with small pieces of insects. Apparently this species is not in the
habit of leading men to beehives.

[Illustration: Fig. 1. Tail of _Ceriocleptes xenurus_, from below.
Nat. size.]




PUBLICATIONS OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY.


The publications of the American Museum of Natural History consist of
the 'Bulletin,' in octavo, of which one volume, consisting of 400 to
800 pages and 25 to 60 plates, with numerous text figures, is
published annually; the 'Memoirs,' in quarto, published in parts at
irregular intervals; and 'Anthropological Papers,' uniform in size and
style with the 'Bulletin.' Also an 'Ethnographical Album,' and the
'American Museum Journal.'


MEMOIRS.

Each Part of the Memoirs' forms a separate and complete monograph,
usually with numerous plates.

VOL. 1. ZOOeLOGY AND PALAEONTOLOGY.

     PART I.--Republication of Descriptions of Lower Carboniferous
     Crinoidea from the Hall Collection now in the American Museum of
     Natural History, with Illustrations of the Original Type Specimens
     not heretofore Figured. By R. Z. Whitfield. Pp. 1-37, pll. i-iii,
     and 14 text figures. September 15, 1893. Price, $2.00.

     PART II.--Republication of Descriptions of Fossils from the Hall
     Collection in the American Museum of Natural History, from the
     report of Progress for 1861 of the Geological Survey of
     Wisconsin, by James Hall, with Illustrations from the Original
     Type Specimens not heretofore Figured. By R. P. Whitfield. Pp.
     39-74, pll. iv-xii. August 10, 1895. Price, $2.00.

     PART III.--The Extinct Rhinoceroses. By Henry Fairfield Osborn.
     Part I. Pp. 75-164, pll. xii_a_-xx, and 49 text figures. April
     22, 1898. Price, $4.20.

     PART IV.--A Complete Mosasaur Skeleton. By Henry Fairfield Osborn.
     Pp. 165-188, pll. xxi-xxiii, and 15 text figures. October 25, 1899.

     PART V.--A Skeleton of Diplodocus. By Henry Fairfield Osborn. Pp.
     189-214, pll. xxiv-xxviii, and 15 text figures. October 25, 1899.
     Price of Parts IV and V, issued under one cover, $2.00.

     PART VI.--Monograph of the Sesiidae of America, North of Mexico.
     By William Beutenmueller. Pp. 215-352, pll. xxix-xxxvi, and 24
     text figures. March, 1901. Price, $5.00.

     PART VII.--Fossil Mammals of the Tertiary of Northeastern
     Colorado. By W. D. Matthew. Pp. 353-448, pll. xxxvii-xxxix, and
     34 text figures. Price, $2.00.

     PART VIII.--The Reptilian Subclasses Diapsida and Synapsida and
     the Early History of the Diaptosauria. By Henry Fairfield Osborn.
     Pp. 449-507, pl. xl, and 28 text figures. November, 1903. Price,
     $2.00.

VOL. II. ANTHROPOLOGY.

_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. I._

     PART I.--Facial Paintings of the Indians of Northern British
     Columbia. By Franz Boas. Pp. 1-24, pll. i-iv. June 16, 1898.
     Price, $2.00.

     PART II.--The Mythology of the Bella Coola Indians. By Franz
     Boas. Pp. 25-127, pll. vii-xii. November, 1898. Price, $2.00.

     PART III.--The Archaeology of Lytton. British Columbia. By Harlan
     I. Smith. Pp. 129-161, pl. xiii, and 117 text figures. May, 1899.
     Price, $2.00.

     PART IV.--The Thompson Indians of British Columbia. By James
     Teit. Edited by Franz Boas. Pp. 163-392, pll. xiv-xx, and 198
     text figures. April, 1900. Price, $5.00.

     PART V.--Basketry Designs of the Salish Indians. By Livingston
     Farrand. Pp. 393-399, pll. xxi-xxiii, and 15 text figures. April,
     1900. Price, 75 cts.

     PART VI.--Archaeology of the Thompson River Region. By Harlan I.
     Smith. Pp. 401-442, pll. xxiv-xxvi, and 51 text figures. June,
     1900. Price, $2.00.

VOL. III. ANTHROPOLOGY.

     PART I.--Symbolism of the Huichol Indians. By Carl Lumholtz. Pp.
     1-228, pll. i-iv, and 291 text figures. May, 1900. Price, $5.00.

     PART II.--The Basketry of the Tlingit. By George T. Emmons. Pp.
     229-277, pll. v-xviii, and 73 text figures. July, 1903. Price,
     $2.00. (Out of print.)

     PART III.--Decorative Art of the Huichol Indians. By Carl
     Lumholtz. Pp. 279-327, pll. xix-xxiii, and 117 text figures.
     November, 1904. Price, $1.50.

     PART IV.--The Chilkat Blanket. By George T. Emmons. With Notes on
     the Blanket Designs, by Franz Boas. November, 1907. Price, $2.00.

VOL. IV. ANTHROPOLOGY.

_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. II._

     PART I.--Traditions of the Chilcotin Indians. By Livingston
     Farrand. Pp. 1-54, June, 1900. Price, $1.50.

     PART II.--Cairns of British Columbia and Washington. By Harlan I.
     Smith and Gerard Fowke. Pp. 55-75, pll. i-v. January, 1901.
     Price, $1.00.

     PART III.--Traditions of the Quinault Indians. By Livingston
     Farrand, assisted by W. S. Kahnweiler. Pp. 77-132. January, 1902.
     Price, $1.00.

     PART IV.--Shell-Heaps of the Lower Fraser River. By Harlan I.
     Smith. Pp. 133-192, pll. vi-vii, and 60 text figures. March,
     1903. Price, $1.00.

     *PART V.--The Lillocet Indians. By James Teit. Pp. 193-300,
     pll. viii and ix, 40 text figures. 1906. Price, $1.80.

     *PART VI.--Archaeology of the Gulf of Georgia and Puget Sound.
     By Harlan I. Smith. Pp. 301-442, pll. x-xii, and 98 text figures.
     1907. Price, $3.00.

     *PART VII.--The Shuswap. By James Teit. Pp. 443-789, pll.
     xiii-xiv, and 82 text figures. 1909. Price, $6.00.

VOL. V. ANTHROPOLOGY.

_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. III._

     PART I.--Kwakiutl Texts. By Franz Boas and George Hunt. Pp.
     1-270. January, 1902. Price, $3.00.

     PART II.--Kwakiutl Texts. By Franz Boas and George Hunt. Pp.
     271-402. December, 1902. Price, $1.50.

     *PART III.--Kwakiutl Texts. By Franz Boas and George Hunt. Pp.
     403-532. 1905. Price, $1.40.

VOL. VI. ANTHROPOLOGY.

_Hyde Expedition._

     The Night Chant, a Navaho Ceremony. By Washington Matthews. Pp.
     i-xvi, 1-332, pll. i-viii (5 colored), and 19 text figures. May,
     1902. Price, $5.00.

VOL. VII. ANTHROPOLOGY (not yet completed).

_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. IV._

     PART I.--The Decorative Art of the Amur Tribes. By Berthold
     Laufer. Pp. 1-79, pll. i-xxxiii, and 24 text figures. December,
     1901. Price, $3.00.

VOL. VIII. ANTHROPOLOGY.

*_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. V._

     PART. I.--The Haida of Queen Charlotte Islands. By John R.
     Swanton. Pp 1-300, pll. i-xxvi, 4 maps, and 31 text figures.
     Price, $8.00.

     PART II.--The Kwakiutl of Vancouver Island. By Franz Boas. Pp.
     301-522. pll. xxvii-lii, and 142 text figures. 1909. Price, $10.00.

VOL. IX. ZOOeLOGY AND PALAEONTOLOGY.

     PART I.--The Osteology of _Camposaurus_ Cope. By Barnum Brown.
     Pp. 1-26, pll. i-v. December, 1905. Price, $2.00.

     PART II.--The Phytosauria, with Especial Reference to
     _Mystriosuchus_ and _Rhytiodon_. By J. H. McGregor. Pp. 27-101,
     pll. vi-xi, and 26 text figures. February, 1906. Price, $2.00.

     PART III.--Studies on the Arthrodira. By Louis Hussakof. May,
     1906. Pp. 103-154, pll. xii and xiii, and 25 text cuts. Price,
     $3.00.

     PART IV.--The Conard Fissure, A Pleistocene Bone Deposit in
     Northern Arkansas, with Descriptions of two New Genera and twenty
     New Species of Mammals. By Barnum Brown. Pp. 155-208, pll.
     xiv-xxv, and 3 text-figures. 1907. Price, $2.50.

     PART V.--Studies on Fossil Fishes (Sharks, Chimaeroids, and
     Arthrodires). By Bashford Dean. Pp. 209-287, pll. xxvi-xli, and
     65 text figures. February, 1909. Price, $3.50.

     PART VI.--The Carnivora and Insectivora of the Bridger Basin,
     Middle Eocene. By W. D. Matthew. Pp. 289-567, pll. xlii-lii, and
     118 text figures. August, 1909. Price, $5.00.

VOL. X. ANTHROPOLOGY.

*_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. VI._

     PART I.--Religion and Myths of the Koryak. By W. Jochelson. Pp.
     1-382, pll. i-xiii, 1 map, and 58 text figures. 1905. Price,
     $10.00.

     PART II.--Material Culture and Social Organization of the Koryak.
     By W. Jochelson. Pp. 383-811, pll. xiv-xl, and 194 text figures.
     1908. Price, $12.00.

VOL. XI. ANTHROPOLOGY.

*_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. VII._

     PART I.--The Chuckchee: Material Culture. By W. Bogoras. Pp.
     1-276, pll. i-xxxi, 1 map, and 199 text figures. 1904. Price,
     $8.00.

     PART II.--The Chuckchee: Religion. By W. Bogoras. Pp. 277-536,
     pll. xxxii-xxxiv, and 101 text figures. 1907. Price, $4.00.

     PART III.--The Chuckchee: Social Organization. By W. Bogoras. Pp.
     537-733, pl. xxxv, and 1 text figure. 1909. Price, $3.00.

VOL. XII. ANTHROPOLOGY (not yet completed).

*_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. VIII._

     PART I.--Chuckchee Mythology. By Waldemar Bogoras. Pp. 1-197,
     1910. Price, $1.25.

VOL. XIII. ANTHROPOLOGY (not yet completed).

*_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. IX._

     PART I.--The Yukaghir and the Yukaghirized Tungus. By Waldemar
     Jochelson. Pp. 1-133, pll. i-vii, 1 map, 1910. Price, $3.40.

VOL. XIV. ANTHROPOLOGY.

*_Jesup North Pacific Expedition, Vol. X._

     PART I.--Kwakiutl Texts. Second Series. By Franz Boas and George
     Hunt. Pp. 1-269. 1906. Price, $2.80.

     PART II.--Ilaida Texts. By John R. Swanton. Pp. 271-802. 1908.
     Price, $5.40.


MEMOIRS.

NEW SERIES, VOL. I.

     PART I.--Crania of Tyranosaurus and Allosaurus. By Henry
     Fairfield Osborn, pp. 1-30, pll. i-iv and text figures 1-27.
     1912.

     PART II.--Integument of the Iguanodont Dinosaur Trachodon. By Henry
     Fairfield Osborn. Pp. 31-54, pll. v-x, and text figures 1-13. 1912.
     Parts I and II are issued under one cover. Price, $2.00.

     PART III.--Craniometry of the Equidae. By Henry Fairfield Osborn.
     Pp. 55-100, text figures 1-17. 1912. Price, 75 cents.

     PART IV.--Orthogenetic and Other Variations in Muskoxen, with a
     Systematic Review of the Muskox Group, Recent and Extinct. By J.
     A. Allen. Pp. 103-226, pll. xi-xviii, text figures 1-45, 1913.
     Price $2.50.

     PART V.--The California Gray Whale (_Rhachianectes glaucus_
     Cope). By Roy C. Andrews. Pp. 229-287, pll. xix-xxvii, text
     figures 1-22. 1914. Price, $2.00.


ETHNOGRAPHICAL ALBUM.

_Jesup North Pacific Expedition._

     Ethnographical Album of the North Pacific Coasts of America and
     Asia. Part 1, pp. 1-5, pll. 1-28. August, 1900. Sold by
     subscription, price, $6.00.


BULLETIN.

The matter in the 'Bulletin' consists of about 24 to 36 articles per
volume, which relate about equally to Geology, Palaeontology,
Mammalogy, Ornithology, Entomology, and (in former volumes)
Anthropology, except Vol. XI, which is restricted to a 'Catalogue of
the Types and Figured Specimens in the Palaeontological Collection of
the Geological Department,' and Vols. XV, XVII, and XVIII, which
relate wholly to Anthropology. Volume XXIII and the later volumes
contain no anthropological matter, which is now issued separately as
'Anthropological Papers.'

    Volume    I, 1881-86        Out of print
       "     II, 1887-90        Price, $4.75
       "    III, 1890-91          "     4.00
       "     IV, 1892             "     4.00
       "      V, 1893             "     4.00
       "     VI, 1894             "     4.00
       "    VII, 1895             "     4.00
       "   VIII, 1896             "     4.00
       "     IX, 1897             "     4.75
       "      X, 1898             "     4.75
       "     XI, 1898-1901        "     5.00
       "    XII, 1899             "     4.00
       "   XIII, 1900             "     4.00
       "    XIV, 1901             "     4.00
       "     XV, 1901-1907        "     5.00
       "    XVI, 1902             "     5.00
       "   XVII, Part   I, 1902   "     1.50
       "    "     "    II,  "     "      .75
       "    "     "    IV, 1905 Out of print
       "    "     "    IV, 1905 Price, $ .75
       "    "     "     V, 1907   "     1.25
       "  XVIII,  "     I, 1902   "     2.00
       "    "     "    II, 1904   "     1.50
       "    "     "   III, 1905   "      .50
       "    "     "    IV, 1907   "     2.00
       "    XIX, 1903             "     6.00
       "     XX, 1904             "     5.00
       "    XXI, 1905             "     5.00
       "   XXII, 1906             "     6.00
       "  XXIII, 1907             "     9.00
       "   XXIV, 1908             "     6.00
       "    XXV, Part   I, 1908   "     1.50
       "   XXVI, 1909             "     6.00
       "  XXVII, 1910             "     5.00
       " XXVIII, 1910             "     4.00
       "   XXIX, 1911             "     4.50
       "    XXX, 1911             "     4.00
       "   XXXI, 1912             "     4.00
       "  XXXII, 1913             "     5.50
       " XXXIII, 1914             "     5.50


ANTHROPOLOGICAL PAPERS.

Vols. I-XIV, 1908-1914.


AMERICAN MUSEUM JOURNAL.

The 'Journal' is a popular record of the progress of the American
Museum of Natural History, issued monthly, from October to May
inclusive. Price, $1.50 a year. Volumes I-XIV, 1900-1914.

*The Anatomy of the Common Squid. By Leonard Worcester Williams. Pp.
1-87, pll. i-iii, and 16 text figures. 1909.

*Chinese Pottery of the Han Dynasty. By Berthold Laufer. Pp. 1-339,
pll. i-lxxv, and 55 text figures. 1909.

                       For sale at the Museum.

*Published by E. J. Brill, Leiden, Holland. Not on sale at
the Museum. American Agent, G. E. Stechert, 129 West 20th Street, New
York City.




Footnote:


[Footnote 1: Colors named according to Ridgway's 'Color Standards and
Nomenclature.']




Transcriber's Note:


    * Text enclosed between equal signs was in bold face in the
    original (=bold=).

    * The symbol for male is represented by [Male].

    * The footnote have been moved to the end of the bulletin.

    * Pg 4 Added hyphen within "tail coverts" in "on belly and under
    tail coverts" for consistency.

    * Pg 7 Added closing single quote after "Journal" in "American
    Museum Journal".

    * Publication listing on each of the cover pages moved to end of
    bulletin in an ordered manner.





End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Descriptions of Three New Birds from
the Belgian Congo, by James Chapin

*** 