- Wild Birds
Girl Feeding some wild birds - White-Capped Tanager
White-Capped Tanager - White-banded Mocking-Bird
White-banded Mocking-Bird - Vultures
- The Woodpeckers Nest
- Shrikes
Shrikes 1 Ochre-Headed Greenlet-Shrike 2 Deep-Billed Greenlet-Shrike - Schulz's Dipper
Schulz's Dipper - Red-breasted Plant-cutter
Red-breasted Plant-cutter - Putting fresh sand in the bird cage
- Polly the parrot
- Owl
- On the Watch
Bird watching a butterfly - Mother Robin
- Mother bird feeding young in nest
- More feathered Pets
- Many-coloured Ground Finch
Many-coloured Ground Finch - Little girl looking at the birds in the tree
- Kestrel
- Giving the chickens some water
- Girl enticing a bird with food
- Frogs and Birds
Frogs and Birds. Black and White Ware. Diameter about 12 inches. Oldtown Ruin - Cow-bird
Cow-bird - Chicks looking out of neck
- Chick in the nest
- Chat-like Tyrant
Chat-like Tyrant - Carrier pigeons in a battle
Carrier pigeons in a battle - Caring for a wounded bird
- Canary Birds
- Brown Cachalote
Brown Cachalote - Bridges’s Wood-Hewer
Bridges’s Wood-Hewer - Boy watching a bird
- Bluebird singing in a tree
- Birds flying in line
- Birds flying in formation
- Birds flying away from nest
- Bird in a cage
- Bird F
The bird shown is different from any of the above and is distinguished readily by the four curved lines on the head suggesting the quail. The pointed tail is marked above and below with dentations, formed by a series of rectangular figures which diminish in size from body attachment to tip. The body itself is marked posteriorly with parallel lines, rectangular and curved figures suggesting wings. - Bird C
Bird C occurs on a black and white bowl that measures ten inches in diameter, five and one-half inches in depth. The figure occupies the circular zone in the middle of the bowl and is enclosed by parallel lines which surround the bowl near the rim. The top of the head, which is globular, is white in color, the beak projecting and the eyes comparatively large. The body is likewise globular and is covered by a square geometrical design the details of which are considerably obscured by the hole in the middle of the jar. A number of parallel lines of unequal length, turned downward, hang from the rear of the body and form the tail. The long legs suggest a wading bird, and the widely extended claws point to the same identification. - Bird B
Bird B is painted on the interior of a food bowl of black and white ware, ten inches in diameter by five inches deep. Its body is oval, the head erect and undecorated, and the tail twisted from a horizontal into a vertical plane as is customary in representation of lateral views of birds from Pueblo ruins. - Bird A
The figure shown is represented by two designs, practically the same, repeated so far as appendages go, but quite different in the ornamentation of their bodies. One of these has the same geometrical figure on its body as on one of the quadruped pictures, the second has a different design. Both birds have wings outspread as if in flight, in which the feathers are well drawn in detail, especially the wing on the side turned toward the observer. That on the opposite side is simply uniformly black. The feathers of its companion on the other side of the bowl are indicated by parallel lines. The tail is long and forked at the extremity, suggesting a hawk, and is decorated for two-thirds of its length with cross-hatched and parallel lines. - Bird
- Australian Goshawk
Astur approximans The Australian Goshawk is a bold, powerful, and most sanguinary species, feeding upon birds, reptiles, and small quadrupeds. It may often be seen lurking about the poultry-yard of the settler, and dealing destruction among the young stock of every kind; daring when at large, and morose and sullen when captured, it never becomes tame and familiar like the true Falcons, but retains its ferocity to the last. - A Turkey Story
- A birds nest with eggs in it