xlvili PROCEEDINGS OF THE 
2. Traité élémentaire de l’Histoire naturelle. 1804; 2nd ed. 
1830. 
3. Zoologie Analytique, ou Méthode naturelle de Classification 
des Animaux. 1806. 
4. Mémoires de Zoologie et d’Anatomie Comparée. 1807. 
5. Sur le developpement de la Chaleur dans les ceufs des Serpens 
(Mém. de I Acad.). 
6. Dissertation sur les Poissons qui se rapprochent le plus des 
Animaux sans Vertébres. 1812. 
7. Dissertation sur la Famille des Poissons Cyclostomes, pour 
démontrer leurs rapports avec les Animaux sans Vertébres. 1812. 
8. Considérations générales sur la Classe des Insectes. 1823. 
9. Erpétologie générale, ou Histoire naturelle des Reptiles. 
1834-54 (in conjunction with his friend and disciple, M. Bibron). 
10. Prodrome de la Classification des Reptiles Ophidiens. 1853. 
11. Ichthyologie Analytique ; ou Essai d’une Classification natu- 
relle des Poissons. 1856. 
12. Entomologie Analytique. 1860. 
The Secretary also announced that twenty-three Fellows, one 
Foreign Member, and one Associate, had been elected since the 
last Anniversary. 
At the Election which subsequently took place, George Ben- 
tham, Esq., was elected President, W. W. Saunders, Esq., Trea- 
surer ; and George Busk, Esq. and Frederick Currey, Esq., Secre- 
taries. The following five Fellows were elected into the Council, 
in the room of others going out :—viz., M. P. Edgeworth, Esq., 
John Miers, Esq., Daniel Oliver, Esq., Lovell Reeve, Esa., and 
P. L. Sclater, Esq. 
It was moved by Dr. Boott, and seconded by Mr. Saunders, 
that the best thanks of the Society be given to Professor Bell, for 
his invaluable services to the Society during the eight years he has 
occupied the President’s chair. That the Society gratefully ac- 
knowledges the unvarying courtesy and kindness with which he 
has discharged the duties of the office, and fully recognizes the 
zealous interest he has taken in the welfare of the Society and 
in the promotion of its objects; willingly attributing to his efforts 
much of its present prosperity and increased usefulness, as dis- 
played in the large number of new Fellows, the value and greater 
frequency of its publications, and the satisfactory state of its 
finances. 
