. "Every bird;" a guide to the identification of the birds of woodland, beach and ocean. With one hundred and twenty-four line illustrations . SHOULDERED HAWK. Species: B. : A very common summer resident of southern New England, rare in winter and in the northern states. General Plumage: Similar to preceding species. Upper parts brown, markedwith white and reddish, tail black, white barred, shouldersrusty red. Immature without or with less red and black, palerwliite and ashy ; under parts white marked with tawny orfulvous. Bill bluish black, feet yellow. Length


. "Every bird;" a guide to the identification of the birds of woodland, beach and ocean. With one hundred and twenty-four line illustrations . SHOULDERED HAWK. Species: B. : A very common summer resident of southern New England, rare in winter and in the northern states. General Plumage: Similar to preceding species. Upper parts brown, markedwith white and reddish, tail black, white barred, shouldersrusty red. Immature without or with less red and black, palerwliite and ashy ; under parts white marked with tawny orfulvous. Bill bluish black, feet yellow. Length Song and Other Notes: Kec-o, Kee-o, Kee-o. Haunts: Similar to preceding species. No. 10. BALD EAGLE. Genus: Haliajetus. Species: IL leucocephalus. Distribution; A summer resident of northern and a resident of southern New England. General Plumage: Deep brown, head and tail white. Immature with little orwhite wanting. Bill pale, feet yellow. Length about Song and Other Notes: A wild, weird cry. The males cry, writes Capt. Bendire,sounds like cac-cac-cac. Haunts: Generally about bodies of water in wild country. WOODLAND BIRDS. 11. BALD EAGLE. 12 WOODLAND BIRDS.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectbirds, bookyear1896