. A history of British birds / by the Rev. F. O. Morris . --V^^^<§^3^H^ WHEATEAii. 61 WHEATEAR. FALLOW-CtTAT. CHACK-BIKD. CLOD-HOPPEE. Syhia cennnthe, Penxaxt. L\tham. Motacilla cenanfhey ^.us. MoxTAGU. Gmelin. - WiLLUGHBY. Kay. Saxicola ananthe, Fleming. Selby. Bechsteix. Sylvia, Si/loa—A wood. CEnmithe—Some species of bird, imagined to be the Wheatear. Most plentiful in the more temperate parts of Europe, theWheatear is foimcl more or less throughout the Continent,from the shores of the Mediterranean to those of the FrozenSea. In Holland they are very abun
. A history of British birds / by the Rev. F. O. Morris . --V^^^<§^3^H^ WHEATEAii. 61 WHEATEAR. FALLOW-CtTAT. CHACK-BIKD. CLOD-HOPPEE. Syhia cennnthe, Penxaxt. L\tham. Motacilla cenanfhey ^.us. MoxTAGU. Gmelin. - WiLLUGHBY. Kay. Saxicola ananthe, Fleming. Selby. Bechsteix. Sylvia, Si/loa—A wood. CEnmithe—Some species of bird, imagined to be the Wheatear. Most plentiful in the more temperate parts of Europe, theWheatear is foimcl more or less throughout the Continent,from the shores of the Mediterranean to those of the FrozenSea. In Holland they are very abundant; they are also foundin Dalmatia and Greece, Denmark, Sweden, and the FerroeIslands, Norway, Lapland, and Iceland. In Asia they havebeen observed, in Asia Minor. In Arctic America one, butonly one, was seen by Captain James Eoss, , in FelixHarbour, on the 2nd. of May, 1S30, but it was killed bycold or hunger the same night. The Wheatear is found in greater or less plenty from theLands End to Cape Wrath. In Yorkshire I continue tonotice a fe
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