294 Geology. 



Greenwell (Canon WILLIAM) 



Presented Mammalian remains from Heathery Burn Cave, Durham, 

 1892. 



Gregory (JOHN WALTER) 



While assistant in the Department of Geology, Dr. Gregory, now 

 Professor of Geology at Melbourne, made an important collection of fossil* 

 in Spitzbergen in 1896, and a large collection of Tertiary and Pleistocene 

 fossils, including bones and teeth of the rodent Amblyrhiza in the West 

 Indies in 1899. These collections were received as donations in the years- 

 mentioned. 



Grenfell (J. G.) 



While a master at Clifton College, Mr. Grenfell collected the crinoids 

 of the Carboniferous Limestone in the Gorge of the Avon, as well as many 

 from Clitheroe and the neighbourhood of Preston, Lancashire, and pub- 

 lished a valuable paper on them in 1876 (Proc. Bristol Nat. Soc. I.). Hi* 

 collection of 61 specimens, purchased by the Trustees in 1891, contained 

 the types of Rhodocrinus verisimilis and Gilbertsocrinus konincki, with 

 figured examples of Poteriocrinus plicatus and Rhodocrinus verus. The 

 specimens were numbered in correspondence with a MS. note-book, 

 presented with the collection; but some of the specimens therein 

 mentioned were not received. The collection had been examined by 

 Major Austin, who agreed with Mr. Grenfell's determinations. 



Grey (Sir GEORGE) 



Presented fossil Reptiles from the Karoo Formation of South Africa, 

 1859. 



Grigson (W. H.) 



Presented Tertiary fossils from Gippsland, Victoria, 1882. 



Grose-Smith (HENLEY) 



Shells and other remains of Testudo grandidieri from caverns of 

 Madagascar, purchased 1892. 



Guenther (ROBERT THEODORE) 



Mr. Guenther, of Magdalen College, Oxford, visited northern Persia ia 

 1898, and collected a few mammalian bones from the Lower Pliocene of 

 Maragha, besides 145 invertebrate fossils, chieily Miocene, from the- 

 neighbourhood of Lake Urmi. The collection was described by Dr. 

 J. W. Gregory, Mr. R. B. Newton, and others, in Mr. Guenther's paper 

 " Contributions to the Natural History of Lake Urmi" (Journ. Linn. Soc. 

 \Zool.~\ 1899), and presented to the Museum by the collector in 1900. 



Gunn (JOHN) 



Presented a Paramoudra from the Chalk of Norfolk, 1827. 

 Guppy (H. B.) 



Presented Post-Tertiary shells from the Solomon Isles, 1887. 



Guppy (ROBERT JOHN LECHMERE) 



Collected Tertiary Foraminifera from Trinidad, purchased 1892. 



Haberlein (KARL) 



Haberlein was a medical practitioner in Pappenheim, Bavaria, where 

 are great quarries in the Lithographic Stone (Lower Kimmeridgian). In 



