
Geoffroius personatus, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 358.
Eudynomis ramsomi, Bon.,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 359.
Centropus medius, Müll.,
P.Z.S., 1863, p. 23.
Cuculus caroides, Müll.,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 359.
Cuculus assimilis, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1858, p. 184.
Cacaomantis sepulchris, Bon.,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 359.
Ptilonopus superbus, Steph.,
P.Z.S., 1858, p. 184.
Ptilonopus prassinorrhous, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1858, p. 185.
Ptilonopus viridis, Gm.,
P.Z S., 1863, p. 34.
Treron aromatica, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1863, p. 33.
Carpophaga perspicillata, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 360.
Carpophaga melanura, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 361.
Macropyqia amboinensis, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 361.
Macropygia, sp.
Chdlcophaps moluccensis, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 361.
Meqapodius Försters, Temm.,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 362.
Meqapodius Wallacii, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 362.
Clareola grallaria, Temm.,
P.Z.S., 1863, p. 35.
Ardetta flavicoUis, Sath.,
Gould, B. of Aust., vol. vi., pi. 65.
Ardea novx-hollandise, Sath.,
Gould, B. of Aust., vol. vi., pi. 53.
Herodias im/maculata, Gould,
B. of Aust., vol. vi., pi. 58 .
Butorides javanica, Blyth,
P.Z.S., 1863, p. 35.
Limosa uropygialis, Gould,
B. of Aust., vol. vi„ pi. 23.
Splioeniculus magnus, Gould,
B. of Aust., vol. vi., pi. 33.
Sphoeniculus suharquatus, Gould,
B. of Aust., vol. vi., pi. 32.
Sphoeniculus aWescens, Gould,
B. of Aust. vol. vi., pi. 31.
Actitis empusa, Gould,
B. of Ausfc., vol. vi., pi. 31.
Totanus griseopygius, Gould,
B. of Aust., vol. vi., pi. 38.
Numenius uropygialis, Gould,
B. of Aust., vol. vi., pi. 43.
Callinula mystacina, Temm.
BaUus pectoralis, Cuv.,-
Gould, B. of Aust., vol. vi., pi. 76.
Rdtlus, sp.
Vendrocyqna guttulata, Gray,
P.Z.S., 1863, p. 36.
Sterna velox, Rupp.,
P.Z.S., 1860, p. 366.
Sulafusca, Gould,
B. of Aust., vol. vii., pi. 78.
N o t e .—For lists of birds collected on the Banda Isles, Ternate, and Celebes,
see ‘ Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History.' For a list of the
shells collected in the Moluccas and other scientific papers, see ' Memoirs and
Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History,’ and the ‘American
Journal of Science for 1868,’ et seq.
I N D E X .
A.
Abreu, Antonio d’, sent to search for the
Spice Islands, 2 3 ; is the first to
reach the Bandas, 215; pillars of
discovery erected by, 256.
Achin, country, people, and trade, 448 ;
English appear at, 449.
Alfura, name whence derived and its
signification, 203, and note ; bloody
laws of, in Ceram, 205 ; of Kaibobo,
207; drunken revels of, 209, 210;
of Buru, their customs and belief,
271—273, of the Minahassa, 365.
Amahai, bay of, described, 202; village
of, ib.
Amboina, residence of Rumpbius, 1 3 ;
island and city described, 130- 132;
famous for its shells, 133 ; life of foreigners
at, 211; trade of, 249.
Am.uk, defined, 383.
Anak gadis, or virgin children, 497, 507.
Anon depressicomis, an antelope, 325.
Ants, abundance of and trouble caused
by, 288, 289.
Army, headquarters of Javanese, 4 3 ;
Dutch, in Sumatra, 456.
Arrack, how made, 68.
Arriens, governor of the Moluccas, 213 ;
kind invitation given the author, ib. ;
i visits Banda, 213 et seq.
Aru Islands, account of, 244.
Assilulu, visit to the village of, 149-
161.
Ayar Bangis, port of, 453.
B.
Baba, island of, described, 127.
Babirusa, skulls of, 150; distribution
of, ib .; young one seen at K'ayeli,
292; author hunts for, on Limbi,
3 2 5; one commits suicide, 331.
Bachian, island of, described, 299 ;
great python killed ou, 334 ; fauna
of, 380.
Baju, a, described, 34.
Bali, described, 93 ; fauna of, ib. ; separation
from Java, 93, 94; fauna of,
94 ; religion of, 95, 96.
Bali, a town hall, 477.
Bamboo, used by the Malays, 86.
Banana, tree and fruit described, 84,
85 ; native name for, 159 ; different
kinds, ib.
Banca, description and geology of, 534 ;
income of, 535.
Banda, author arrives at, 128, and revisits,
214 ; description of the group,
214, 215 ; early inhabitants of, 216 ;
religion of, ib. ; natives of, exterminated
by the Dutch, 217; convicts
banished to, 217, 218 ; the group
only walls of a crater, 224 ; compared
with that of the Tenger Mountains,
ib. ; nutmeg parks on, 227 ; residency
of, 242.
Banteng, the Bos sondaicus, 72.
Bantiks, a people near Menado, 343.
Barros, Jao de, history of, 97, no’e :
his description of Celebes, 97 ; describes
the many languages spoker in
the Moluccas, 163 ; his description
of the Bandas, 215, 216.
Barus, a port in Sumatra, 442.
Batavia, purpose of going to, 13 ; foun
dation of, 24 ; police of, 383.
Batta, grave of a, 417 ; Lands, a description
of, 423 ; are cannibals, 424 ; referred
to by Marco Polo, 425 ; by Sir
Stamford Raffles, ib. ; draw the author’s
carriage, 426, 427 ; author
visits a village of, 440; houses of,
ib. ; eat a man, 442 ; missionaries
among, 443 ; Madame Pfeiffer among,
444 ; kill two American missionaries.