390 OBITUARY. 



Dr. Bransby Cooper, an eminent English medical writer and surgeon. 



M. Crentzfeldt, botanist to the Gumiison expedition ; massacred by the Indians. 



Samuel Dakin, of N. Y. Patentee of the Sectional Dry Dock. 



Hon. John Delafield, an eminent agriculturist of New York. President of the Ag- 

 ricultural College. 



M. Emile Dtville and M. Duret, French explorers of the interior of Brazil. 



Earl Dude, President of the Royal Agricultural Society, England. 



Prof. Farrar, of Cambridge, Mass. 



Dr. James H. Gray. A member of the American Association for the Promotion 

 of Science. Killed at Norwalk, Conn. 



Capt. Gunnison, U. S. A., murdered, while conducting an exploring expedition 

 for locating the Pacific Rail Road, by the Utah Indians, near the Great Salt 

 Lake. 



Dr. Harless, an eminent German medical writer, Professor in the University of 

 Bonn. 



Augusts St. Hilaire, an eminent French botanist. 



Lieut. A. C. Jackson, U. S. N. 



Capt. Edward Johnson, Superintendent of the Compass Department, R. N. 



M. Jussieu, the botanist. President of the French Academy. 



Lieut. Kern, U. S. Top. Eng. Murdered by the Indians while attached to the Gun- 

 nison expedition. 



M. Auguste Laurent, formerly Assayer of the Mint of France, and an eminent 

 chemist. 



M. Laurillard, Conservator of the Cabinet of Comparative Anatomy, Jardin des 

 Plantes, Paris. 



W. Gibbs McNeil, an eminent American engineer, constructor of the U. S. dry 

 dock at Brooklyn, and other national works. 



Dexter Marsh, a naturalist, well-known for his collection of the New Red Sand- 

 stone fossils of the Connecticut valley. 



Thomas Norris, F. R. S., a scientific connoisseur, well-known in England. 



M. Orftlla, the French toxicologist. 



Dr. Ovenveg, the celebrated Atrican traveller. 



Dr. Perida, author of the Materia Medica. 



Dr. Pierson, of Salem, Mass. Member of the American Academy. Killed at Nor- 

 walk, Conn. 



Dr. Presl, of Prague, an eminent German botanist. 



M. Reitz, a German explorer of Central Africa. 



John W. Remington, the inventor of the bridge known by his name. 



Mr. Schlatter, an attache and draughtsman of the U. S. Geological Survey at Por- 

 tage Lake. Frozen to death. 



Hczekiah C. Seymour, New York, State Engineer. 



Mr. Shaw, an eminent English agricultural writer. 



C. A. Shelton, an eminent agriculturist, botanist and naturalist, killed by a steam- 

 boat explosion in California. 



Dr. Junius Smith, an eminent agriculturist, well-known as the cultivator of the tea 

 plant in South Carolina. 



Anthony D. Stanley, Professor of Mathematics, Yale College. 



Lieut. Strangford, R. N., Superintendent of Chronometers. 



E. H. Strickland, an eminent English geologist; killed on a railroad. 



J. E. Teschemachfr, an eminent geologist and naturalist. Member of the Boston 

 Society of Natural History. 



Rev. Charles Turner, F. R. S., an English scientific Avriter. 



Sears C. Walker, a distinguished American astronomer and mathematician, Ask, 

 U. S. Coast Survey. 



Dr. Walpers, of Berlin, botanist. 



John P. Wetherill, President of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia. 



Capt. Warner, the inventor of the so-called " long-range." 



Leopold Von Buck, the distinguished German geologist 



Admiral Zahrtmann of Copenhagen, a Danish geographer and hydrographer. 



