532 . THE AMERICAN NATURALIST. 
in the University of Chicago. — Dr. Gregg Wilson, tutor in zoology 
in Heriott-Watt College, Edinburgh. — Mr. J. B. Woodworth, of Har- 
vard, assistant on the New York Geological Survey. — H. Woods, 
tutor in paleozoólogy in the University of Cambridge. 
Deaths: Émile Blanchard, zoólogist, at Paris.— Mr. Andrew 
Bolter, entomologist, in Chicago, March 18, aged 8o. — John Brooks 
Bridgman, student of Hymenoptera, at Norwich, England, October 
6, aged 63. — W. E. Brooks, ornithologist, at Mount Forest, Ontario, 
aged 70. — Giovanni Canestrini, professor of zoology and compara- 
tive anatomy in the University of Padua, February 14. — Edouard 
Coucke, student of Coleoptera, in Brussels. — Frank Hamilton Cush- 
ing, ethnologist, well known for his studies of the Zuhi Indians, 
April 10, aged 43. — Francois Decaux, entomologist, in Neuilly. — 
George Dowker, botanist and geologist, at Ramsgate, England, Sep- 
tember 23, aged 71. — Dr. A. Ernst, formerly director of the National 
Museum at Caracas, Venezuela. — Richard Fereday, student of. 
lepidoptera, at Christchurch, New Zealand, August 3o, aged 79. — 
Hans Bruno Geinitz, the geologist and paleontologist, at Dresden, 
January 28, aged 86.— Walter Gótze, botanist, in German East 
Africa. — Baron J. C. L. d'Hamonville, ornithologist, near Manon- 
ville, France, November 17, aged 69. — F. L. Harvey, professor of 
natural history in Maine State College and botanist and entomologist 
to the Maine Experiment Station, by suicide, March 6, aged 50. — 
Baron Oskar von Loewis, of Menar, at Kudling, Livonia, an ornitholo- 
gist, Aug. 6, 1899, aged 61. — A. F. Marion, professor of zoólogy in the 
Faculty of Sciences at Marseilles, January 23, aged 53.— P. Matheron, 
paleontologist, in Marseilles, Dec. 31, 1899, aged 93. — M. Alphonse 
Milne-Edwards, the eminent French zoólogist, April 21, aged 64. — 
Professor St. George Mivart, the well-known zoólogist, in London, 
April 1, aged 73. — Dr. R. Nasse, geologist, in Berlin, December 2; 
aged 62. — Dr. Wilhelm von Nathusius, well known for his studies 
of the shell of birds’ eggs in Halle, December 25, aged 78. — Dr. 
Manuel Paulino d'Oliveira, professor of zoólogy at Coimbra, Portu- 
gal, August 25. — Dr. Karl Maria Paul, of the Austrian Geological 
Survey, in Vienna, February 1o. — Dr. Lucien Quélet, mycologist, 
in Herimoncourt, France. — Mr. George P. Sennet, ornithologist, 
at Youngstown, Ohio, March 18, aged 59. — Dr. Karl Sommer, 
student of Lepidoptera in Oberlóssnitz, Germany, November 18.— 
Dr. Wilhelm Zenker, astrophysicist, but earlier a student of arthro- 
pods, in Berlin, October 21, aged 7o. — Dr. Giovanni Zoja, professor 
of anatomy in Padua. 
