362 DR. HONEYMAN’S WRITINGS—GILPIN. 
hoped that some member of the Institute will continue it toa 
successful ending. 
In these remarks I have not undertaken to follow the Doctor in 
the battles he waged with his fellow geologists, nor to enter into the 
details of the grounds upon which he based his geological con- 
clusions. It may be said that his labors in working out the struc- 
tures of the Arisaig rocks and tracing them into the other parts of 
the Province have afforded great assistance to those who have 
followed in his footsteps, and have given him a lasting claim on 
the gratitude of Provincial Geologists. 
I beg in conclusion to say that I hope this brief sketch of Dr. 
Honeyman’s Geological work will serve to us as a monument of 
perseverance and assiduity, and remind us of how much we owe 
to him for bis labors in forwarding the Institute. 
