10 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NEW HAVEN MEETING 



Beet S. Butler. A. B.. A. M., U. S. Geological Survey. Washington. D. C. 



Charles Butts, B. S.. M. S., U. S. Geological Survey. Washington, D. C. 



De Lorme Donaldson Cairnes. B. Sc. M. E., Geological Survey, Ottawa, 

 Canada. 



William Robert Calvert. A. B.. U. S. Geological Survey, Washington. D. C. 



William Harvey Emmons, A. B., Ph. D.. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 

 Minn. 



Henry Hinds. B. A.. U. S. Geological Survey. Washington, D. C. 



Frank James Katz. A. B.. U. S. Geological Survey. Washington. D. C. 



Edwin Kirk. A. B.. Ph. D.. U. S. Geological Survey. Washington. D. C. 



Laurence La Forge. A. B.. A. M.. Ph. D.. U. S. Geological Survey. Washington, 

 D. C. 



Fred Howard Moffit. A. B.. A. M, U. S. Geological Survey. Washington. D. C. 



William Clifton Phalen. S. B., S. M.. Ph. D.. U. S. Geological Survey, Wash- 

 ington, D. C. 



Louis M. Prindle. A. B., U. S. Geological Survey. Washington. D. C. 



John Lyon Rich, A. B.. A. M.. Ph. D.. University of Illinois. Urbana. 111. 



Alfred Reginald Schultz. B. S.. Ph. D„ U. S. Geological Survey. Washington, 

 D. C. 



Eugene Wesley Shaw. B. S.. U. S. Geological Survey. Washington, D. C. 



Claude Ellsworth Siebenthal. A. B.. A. M.. U. S. Geological Survey, Wash- 

 ington. D. C, 



Carl Smith, B. A., U. S. Geological Survey, Washington, D. C. 



Ralph Walter Stone. A. B.. A. M., Ph. D.. U. S. Geological Survey. Washing- 

 ton. D. C. 



Carroll Harvey Wegemann, B. S., M. A., U. S. Geological Survey, Washing- 

 ton. D. C. 



Announcement was then made that the Society had lost the following 

 Fellows by death during the year 1912: E. K. Buckley. C. E. Button, 

 T. M. Jackson, W J McGee, and Ealph S. Tarr, and one Correspondent, 

 Ferdinand Zirkel. Memorials of deceased Fellows were presented as 

 follows : 



MEMOIR OF CLARENCE EDWARD DUTTON 

 BY J. S. DILLER 



Major Clarence Edward Dutton. one of the first seismologists of his 

 country, widely known for his reports on the Charleston earthquake, the 

 high plateaus of Utah, and the Grand Canyon of the Colorado, was born 

 May 15, 1841, at Wallingford. Connecticut, and died January -1, 1912, at 

 Englewood, X. J. His parents were Samuel and Emily (Curtis) Dutton. 

 At Ellington, Connecticut, he received his preliminary education, and in 

 June 1856, entered Yale, where he graduated in 1860 with the degree of 

 A. B., at the age of nineteen. April 18, 1864. lie married Emeline C. 

 Babcock, of Xew Haven, Connecticut. 



