416 Miscellaneous Intelligence. 
chapter by him, treating especially of the Vermilion County Car- 
boniferous rocks. Two species of land snails from these rocks 
of the Territories under Dr. F. V. Hayden, and among his impor- 
tant results, as set forth in his excellent report, there is the identi- 
rofessor Bradley was a man of profound zeal for science, of exact- 
ness in observation, of great en y, and of independent judgment 
a ose. His tall, straight figure, neatly dressed, but after a 
order to avoid friction, and met with more of this than he need 
have encountered. But he was a man of real kindness of heart, of 
warm friendships, and of great uprightness. 
Professor Bradley was married to Miss Sarah M. Bolles of New 
Haven, in 1867. He leaves a wife and one young daughter, an 
infant child having died on the day of his own death. J. D. D. 
_ Dove, the eminent professor of Physical Geography at Berlin, 
died on the 6th of April, at the age of seventy-seven. 
W. K. Currorp, of University College, London, an able 
died at Madeira, early in March. 
