278 Geology. 



Clarke (WILLIAM BRANWHITE) 



Presented jaw of Sthenurus minor from river deposit, New South 

 Wales, 1877. 

 Claussen (P.) 



Dr. Claussen studied the geology of the province of Minas Geraes, 

 Brazil, and explored some of the caverns, from which he obtained a 

 collection of bones, chiefly mammalian, recorded by him in the Bulletin 

 of the Koyal Academy of Brussels (1841), and sold to the British Museum 

 in two instalments in 1841 and 1844. 



Claypole (EDWARD WALLER) 



Presented specimens of Palxaspis arnericana from the Upper Silurian 

 of Pennsylvania, 1890; sold specimens of Cladoselache from U. Devonian, 

 Ohio (W. Clark Coll.), 1896. 



Clemenceau 



Collected fossils from French Chalk, purchased 1900. 



Cleminshaw (EDWARD) 



Presented upper jaw of Megalosaurus bucMandi from the Inferior 

 Oolite, Sherborne, 1883. 



Clift (WILLIAM) 



Presented mammalian bones discovered by Mr. Whidbey in Oreston 

 cavern, 1822. 



Clifton (GEORGE) 



Presented a collection of British fossils, including fish-remains from 

 the Portland Stone (Caturus diftoni, &c.), 1889. 



Cochrane (Sir ALEXANDER) 



Obtained the fossil human skeleton from Guadaloupe, presented by 

 the Lords of the Admiralty, 1813. 



Collins (A. L.) 



Presented Palaeozoic Crinoidal limestone from Afghanistan, 1893. 



Colvin (Col) 



Presented remains of ostrich, Struthio asiaticus, from Siwalik Forma- 

 tion, India, 1848. 



Conry (THOMAS) 



Presented eggs of turtles from a consolidated beach, Island of 

 Ascension, 1812. 



Cooke (JOHN HENRY) 



For some years Mr. Cooke was a schoolmaster in Malta and in- 

 vestigated the geology of the Maltese Islands, publishing papers in 

 the Geological Magazine (1891), the Quarterly Journal of the Geo- 

 logical Society (1893), and elsewhere. He presented 14 Pleistocene 

 Mollusca and 44 Tertiary Echinoidea from Malta to the Museum 

 in 1892. He also explored the Har Dalam Caverns, with the aid of a 

 Government grant, and the first selection of 200 specimens from his 

 collection of mammalian remains, described in the Proceedings of the 

 Royal Society (1893), was presented to the Museum by the Council of 



