592 ANNUAL RECORD OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. 



jeeling, in India, the sanitarium for the British army in Bengal. A high 

 authority on the geography, natural history, ethnology, and geology of India 

 and Central Asia. Died in London in the seventieth year of his age. 



Collomb, Edward. Treasurer of the Geological Society of Paris. A 

 companion of Professor Agassiz in Alpine travel, and of Verneuil while study- 

 ing the economical mineralogy of certain portions of Spain. Died in June. 



D' Arrest, Professor Henri Louis. Professor of Astronomy at the 

 Universities of Leipsic and of Copenhagen. Discoverer of several comets 

 and an asteroid. Born at Berlin. Died June 14th, in the fifty-third year 

 of his age. 



Deshayes, G. B. An eminent and veteran conchologist of Paris. Died 

 June 9 th. 



D'Halloy, D'OmalillS. A Belgian geologist, and author of many mem- 

 oirs on geological subjects. Born in Liege, February 16th, 1783. Died 

 January 15th, at the age of ninety-two. 



Diehl, Israel S. A zealous collector of objects of Natural History, and 

 at one time United States Consul at Batavia. Aided in the introduction 

 of a large number of Cashmere goats into the United States. Died near 

 Gettysburg, in Pennsylvania, January 4th, at the age of forty-nine. 



Doubleday, Henry. An authority on the subject of the Lepidoptera of 

 Great Britain, and familiar with its general natural history. Died June 

 29th, in the sixty-seventh year of his age. 



Dufour, General H. W. Well known to geographers from the topo- 

 graphical maps of Switzerland produced under his direction as chief of the 

 Swiss general staff. Died at Geneva about the middle of July. 



Findlay, A. G. An eminent geographer and author of many excellent 

 maps and charts. Publisher of sailing directions for various parts of the 

 world, to the amount of over G000 pages. Born in London, January 6th, 

 1812. Died at Dover, May 3d, in the sixty-fourth year of his age. 



Franklin, Lady. Distinguished as the wife of Sir John Franklin, and 

 the companion of his geographical and other pursuits, from the date of her 

 marriage, November 5th, 1828, until his departure on his last journey in 

 1845. She was devoted to the effort to secure the relief of or information 

 respecting the fate of her husband even to the time of her own death, and 

 was the only woman besides Mrs. Somerville who enjoyed the distinction of 

 having the gold medal of the Royal Geographical Society conferred upon 

 her. Died July 15th, at the age of eighty-three. 



Goodenough, Commodore J. G. A British naval officer and geogra- 

 pher. Born in 1830. Entered the navy in 1844, on the Collingwood. Kill- 

 ed by a poisoned arrow while trying to open friendly intercourse with the 

 natives of Santa Cruz Island, August 20th. 



Gray, Dr. John Edward. The veteran zoologist of the British Museum, 

 with which he was connected fifty years, and for thirty-five years its keeper. 



