lviil PROCEEDINGS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. [May 1 896,. 



rejoiced than he did when the geologists of Belgium made known 

 the discovery of the series of magnificently perfect Iguanodon 

 skeletons, a facsimile of one of which now adorns the Museum 

 of Natural History in Cromwell Eoad. 



Mr. Hulke served for many years on the Council of this Society,, 

 and the high esteem in which he was held by the leading geo- 

 logists of the day, as well as the thorough appreciation of his 

 palseontological work, found expression by their electing him, in 

 1882, to fill the Presidential chair of this Society, and, in 1887, 

 by presenting him with the Wollaston Gold Medal, the greatest 

 honour that it was in the power of the Council to bestow. In 1891 

 he was elected Foreign Secretary of the Geological Society, which 

 office he still held at the time of his decease. 



Mr. Hulke left behind him a large series of most valuable speci- 

 mens, mostly of Dinosauria, obtained with his own hands from the 

 Undercliff in the Isle of Wight. This collection has been presented 

 to the British Museum (Natural History) by Mrs. Hulke, in memory 

 of her husband. 



Lieutenant-General R. F. Coplahd-Craweord, E. A., was elected 

 a Fellow of the Geological Society of London in 1875, and died at 

 his residence, Sunbury Lodge, near Wembley, Harrow, on March 5th, 

 1895, in his 85th year. 



He was for many years a constant attendant at the Anniversary 

 Meetings of the Palseontographical and Geological Societies, and 

 his handsome, tall figure, military bearing, and his graceful method 

 of proposing resolutions on such occasions will be remembered by 

 many Fellows. He was not a writer, but a reader of geological 

 literature. 



Sir Edward Herbert Bunbtjri, Bart., was born in 1811, and 

 educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, where, in 1833, he 

 graduated B.A. (was senior classic and Chancellor's Medallist), and 

 M.A. in 1836. Five years later he was called to the Bar of the 

 Inner Temple, and was M.P. for Bury St. Edmunds from 1847 to 

 1852. He was elected a Fellow of the Geological Society in 1837, 

 but does not appear to have communicated any paper to the 

 ' Quarterly Journal.' Sir Edward Bunbury brought out his 

 8 History of Ancient Geography ' in 1879, and was a contributor to 

 Sir William Smith's i Dictionaries of Greek and Roman Biography 

 and Geography,' especially the latter. He died on March 5th y . 

 1895, in his 84th year. 



