Two British naturalists, John Bradbury and Thomas Nuttall, accompany the Astor Expedition as far as South and North Dakota. Nuttall later writes an account of the birds seen in Manual of the Ornithology of the United States and of Canada 1832.
Bechstein inadequately describes a bird he calls Lanius gularis in an obscure work titled Kurze Uebersicht aller bekannten Vögel oder ihre kennzeichen der Art nach Latham’s General Synopsis of Birds und seinem Index ornithologicus. This is later thought to be the large woodshrike and the name causes some taxonomic problems. Such situations are not uncommon due to problems with language, library insufficiency, short descriptions and the profusion of bird names published in this century.