298 Geology. 



Hinton (HENRY ARTHUR) 



Presented Cretaceous Polyzoa, 1897. 



Hitchcock (EDWARD) 



Presented Triassic footprints from Connecticut, 1862. 



Hoffert (H. H.) 



Presented Palaeozoic fossils from the Falkland Islands, 1891. 



Holl (HARVEY BUCHANAN) [1820-1886] 



A pupil in field geology of Sir H. de la Beche and Rogers of Pennsyl- 

 vania, Holl retired to Malvern in 1862 and carried out valuable studies 

 on the geology of the Malvern Hills (Quart. Journ. Geol Soc., 1864-65). 

 He also published papers on the Inferior Oolite in the middle and south of 

 England (op. cit., 1863), and on the older rocks of south Devon and east 

 Cornwall (op. cit., 1869). He wrote several papers on fossil sponges and 

 Entomostraca, the latter in conjunction with T. Eupert Jones (1865-69). 

 Holl's collection, purchased from his executor, W. H. Holl, Esq., Q.C., 

 consisted of 414 slides of Foraminifera and Ostracoda, the latter including 

 the specimens figured by Jones and Holl, and 1205 invertebrate fossils 

 from various British formations, especially those discussed in the above- 

 mentioned papers. Among them were a figured specimen of Ilomalonotus 

 johannis, and types of Mesozoic corals figured by P. Martin Duncan, viz., 

 Cyclolites beani, Montlivaltia hotti, M. painswicki, and Septastrea haimei 

 (Palseontogr. Soc.). 



Hollis (THOMAS) 



Presented Tertiary shells from Sicily, 1763. 



Holm (GERHARD) 



Prepared specimens of Eurypterus from the Upper Silurian of Oesel, 

 purchased 1898. 



Holroyd (WILLIAM FIRTH) 



Presented English Lower Carboniferous Invertebrata, 1897. 



Hoist (P. A.) 



Kemains of Cervus giganteus from Eussia, purchased 1883. 



Home (Sir EVERARD) 



Presented vertebral column of Ichthyosaurus from the Lower Lias of 

 Lyme Eegis, 1819. 



Homersham (COLETTE) 



Presented rocks and fossils from a deep boring at Eichmoud, Surrey. 

 1887. 



Homfray (DAVID) [1822-1893] 



By profession a lawyer, resident at Portmadoc in North Wales, 

 Homfray spent his leisure in searching for fossils in the Palaeozoic rocks 

 of the neighbourhood, where he discovered many new forms, especially in 

 the Tremadoc beds. He also worked the Menevian strata of Maentwrog 

 and St. Davids with equal success. He was most generous in giving 

 away even his finest specimens, and among other Museums that chiefly 

 benefited by his labours were the Woodwardian at Cambridge, and the 

 Manchester Museum. The latter contains several of his trilobites and a 



