FELLOWS OF THE SOCIETY 



581 



Adam Capen Gill, Ph. D., Ithaca, N. Y. ; Assistant Professor of Mineralogy and 

 Petrography in Cornell Univ^ersity. December, 1888. 



L. C. Glenn, Ph. D., Nashville, Tenn. ; Professor of Geology in Vanderbilt Uni- 

 versity. June, 1900. 



Charles H. Gordon, Ph. D., University Sta., Seattle, Wash. ; Acting Professor of 

 Geology, University of Washington. August, 1893. 



Amadeus W. Grabau, S. B.,- Columbia University, New York city; Lecturer on 

 Paleontology. December, 1898. 



Ulysses Sherman Grant, Ph. D., Evanston, 111.; Professor of Geology, North- 

 western University. December, 1890. 



Herbert E. Gregory, Ph. D., New Haven, Conn.; Assistant Professor of Physi- 

 ography, Yale University. August, 1901. 



William S. Gresley, 115 Eadbourne St., Derby, England. Mining Engineer. 

 December, 1893. 



George P. Grimsley, Ph. D,, Topeka, Ivans. ; Professor of Geology in Washburn 

 College. August, 1895. 



Leon S. Griswold, A. B., 238 Boston St., Dorchester, Mass. August, 1902. 



Frederic P. Gulliver, Ph. D., St. Mark's School, Southboro, Mass. August, 1895. 



Arnold Hague, Ph. B., United States Geological Survey, Washington, D. C. 

 May, 1889. 



*Ckristophkr W. Hall, A. M., 803 University Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. ; Pro 

 fessor of Geology and Mineralogy in University of Minnesota. 



John Burchmore Harrison, M. A., F. T. C, F. G. S., Georgetown, British Guiana ; 

 Government Geologist. June, 1902. 



John B. Hastings, M. E., Stanley, Custer Co , Idaho. May, 1889. 



John B. Hatcher, Ph. B., Carnegie Museum, Pittsburg, Pa. August, 1895. 



* Erasmus Haworth, Ph. D. , Lawrence, Kans. ; Professor of Geology, University 



of Kansas. 

 C. Willard Hayes, Ph. D., United States Geological Survey, Washington, D. C. 



May, 1889. 

 *Angelo Heilprin, xAcademy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, Pa. ; Professor of 



Paleontology in the Academy of Natural Sciences. 

 ^Eugene W. Hilgard, Ph. D., LL. D., Berkeley, Cab; Professor of Agriculture 



in University of California. 

 Frank A. Hill, Roanoke, Va. May, 1889. 



* Robert T. Hill, B. S., U. S. Geological Survey, Washington, D. C. 

 RrCHARD C. Hills, Mining Engineer, Denver, Colo. August, 1894. 



* Charles H. Hitchcock, Ph. D., LL. D., Hanover, N. H. ; Professor of Geology 



in Dartmouth College. 



William Herbkrt Hobbs, Ph. D., Madison, Wis. ; Professor of Mineralogy and 

 Petrology, University of Wisconsin ; Assistant Geologist, U. S. Geological 

 Survey. August, 1891, 



*Levi Holbrook, a. M., P. O. Box 536, New York city. 



Arthur Hollick, Ph. B., N. Y. Botanical Garden, Bronx Park, New York; In- 

 structor in Geology, Columbia University. August, 1893. 



* Joseph A. Holmks, St. Louis, Mo.; Chief of Department of Mines and Metal- 



lurgy, Univ^ersal Exposition ; State Geologist and Professor of Geology, Uni- 

 versity of North Carolina. 



