300 Geology. 



Hunter (ROBERT) [1823-1897] 



As missionary at Nagpur, central India, from 1847 to 1855, Hunter 

 pursued geological researches in that region with Rev. Stephen Hislop. 

 He collected fossils in both the Nagpur district and other parts of India, 

 and his whole collection, of about 1700 specimens, was received by the 

 British Museum as a bequest in 1897. 



India, Geological Survey of 



Presented fossil Corals from Sicd, 1881. 



India, Secretary of State for 



Presented Mammalia and Ileptilia from the Siwalik Formation of 

 India, 1860. 



Inglefield (Admiral Sir EDWARD AUGUSTUS) [1820-1894] 



In 1852, Inglefield undertook a voyage to the Arctic in the Isabel, in 

 search of Sir John Franklin, and in the following year published an 

 account of the expedition, with remarks on the physical geography, 

 geology, etc., of Davis Straits, and its east and west shores, by P. C. 

 Sutherland, surgeon to the expedition. His collection of fossils was 

 transferred from the Museum of Practical Geology in 1878. 



Inglis (DAVID) 



Presented skull of Bos primigenius from Athol, Perthshire, 1817. 



Inwards (RICHARD) 



Presented Palaeozoic fossils from Bolivia, 1830. 



Jack (ROBERT LOGAN) 



Presented fossil Invertebrata from Australia, 1879. 



Jackson (FREDERICK) 



Presented duplicates from a collection of Jurassic fossils from Franz 

 Josef Land, 1899. 



Jackson (J. E.) 



Presented Pentacrinus fossilis and Carboniferous Crinoids, 1887. 



Jardin des Plantes, Paris 



Presented fossils from the Gypsum Quarries near Paris, 1818. 



Jayakar (Lieut.-Col. A. S. G.) 



Presented Eocene Mollusca from Oman, Arabia, 1900. 



Jennings (W. F.) 



Collected English Mesozoic Invertebrata, presented by Miss Ethel A. 

 Thomas, 1892. 



Jesson (THOMAS) 



Mr. Jesson began his collection at Cambridge, when he obtained a fine 

 series of fossils from the Cambridge Greensand, including some unique 

 bones of birds described by Prof. Seeley (Quart. Journ. OeoL Soc., 1876), 

 and a few small Chelonian skulls described by Mr. Lydekker (loc. cit., 

 1889). At the same time he collected from the Red Chalk of Hunstanton. 

 Subsequently removing to the neighbourhood of Northampton, Mr. Jesson 

 devoted attention to the Great Oolite of that district and the Oxford Clay 



