jcii PREFAC E.
jny own efforts will be amply repaid. Although the work comprises every species known to
inhabit Australia up to the present time, it is not to be supposed that it contains the whole of
the birds of that vast country, of which so large a portion is yet a. terra incognita. Every new
district towards the north-west that may be explored will doubtless afford additional species,
and which may hereafter form the materials for a supplement.
I originally intended to include the Birds of New Zealand in the present work, but upon
further investigation of the subject I found that they belong to a distinct Fauna, which fact,
coupled with the vast accession of new species from the continent of Australia, induced me to
omit all but those that had been published in the first instance, and one .or two others
remarkable for their great interest.
Enjoying, by the blessing of Providence, constant good health, and energies as yet
unimpaired, I propose still to devote my humble efforts to the advancement of Ornithology,
that science which treats of one of the most pleasing portions of the Almighty’s many wonderful
works; and with ample materials at my command for illustrating the Birds of another magnificent
portion of the domains of the British Crown—India—my next work will probably be on
w the Birds of Asia,” which will, irrespective of all other considerations, be of no little interest
as forming the connecting link between the Birds of Europe and the Birds of Australia.
JOH N GOULD,
J u n e 1 2 , 1848.
I N T R O D U C T I O N .
G e o l o g i c a l researches into the structure of the globe show that a succession of physical changes
have modified its surface from the earliest period up to the present time, and that these changes have
been accompanied with variations not only in the phases of animal and vegetable life, but often in the
development also of organization ; and as these changes cannot be' supposed to have been operating
uniformly over the entire surface of the globe in the same periods of time, we should naturally be prepared
for finding the now existing fauna of some regions exhibiting a higher state of development than that of
others ; accordingly, if we contrast the fauna of the old continents of geographers with the zoology of
Australia and New Zealand, we find a wide difference in the degree of organization which creation has
reached in these respective regions. In New Zealand, with the êxception of a Vespertilio and a Mus,
which latter is said to exist there, but which has not yet been sent to this country, the most highly
organized animal hitherto discovered, either fossil o r recent, is a bird ; in Australia, if compared with New
Zealand, creation appears to have considerably advanced, but even here the order Rodentia is the highest
in the scale of its indigenous animal productions ; the great majority of its quadrupeds being the
M a r s u p i a t a (Kangaroos, &c.) and the M o n o t r e m a t a (Echidna and Ornithorîynchus), which are the very
lowest of the Mammalia; and its ornithology being characterized by the presence of certain peculiar
genera, Talegalla, Leipoa and Megapodius ; birds which do not incubate their own eggs, and which are
perhaps the lowest representatives of their class, while the low organization of its botany is indicated by
the remarkable absence of fruit-bearing trees, the Cerealia, &c.
My investigation of the natural productions of Australia induces me to believe, that at some remote
period that country was divided into at least two portions, since, with a few exceptions, I find the species
inhabiting the same latitudes of its eastern and western divisions differing from, but representing each other.
Some writers, Captain Sturt and Mr. Jukes; e.g.- are of opinion that its subdivision was even greater, and
that the sandy deserts now met with in the interior were formerly the beds of the seas that flowed between the
archipelago of islands of which they suppose it to have been composed. In a valuable paper by Mr. Jukes,
entitled ‘ Notes' on the Geology of the' Coasts of Australia,’ read at the meeting of the Geological Society
on the 17th of November 1847, that gentleman stated, that “ The eastern coast is occupied by a great
range of high land, appearing like a-continuous chain of mountains when seen from the sea, and rising in
several places to 5000 feet or more above the sea-level. This chain has an axis of granite, with occasional-
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