No. 374-] SCIENTIFIC NEWS. 145 
81.— Dr. Louis Calori, formerly professor of anatomy in the Uni- 
versity of Bologna. — Dr. Cesare Crety, professor of zoology and 
comparative anatomy in the University of Sassari, Sardinia, Septem- 
ber 14. — Joseph William Dunning, entomologist, in London, October 
15.— Prof. Raphael von Erlanger, zoologist, at Heidelberg, aged 33. 
—Dr. J. Frenzel, zoologist, in charge of the Miiggelsee Biological 
Station near Berlin, aged 39. Dr. Frenzel spent several years in 
South America, and did much work upon the invertebrate fauna. — 
Ernest Giles, an Australian explorer. — Francisque Guillebeau, a 
student of Coleoptera, at Le Plantay, France, August 17, aged 76.— 
Dr. M. Forster Heddle, mineralogist, St. Andrews, Scotland, Novem- 
ber 19, aged 69. — Dr. Samuel Houghton, for thirty years professor 
of geology in Trinity College, Dublin, October 31, aged 76.— Dr. 
Nikolaus Kleinenberg, professor of comparative anatomy in the Uni- 
versity of Palermo, well known for his researches on Hydra and on 
the developmentof annelids. — Prof. Alessandro Lanzillotti- Buonsanti, 
a student of the anatomy of domestic animals, at Milan, September 
10, aged 40. — August Merkel, student of Coleoptera, in Brooklyn, 
August 19, aged 60,— Samuel A. Miller, well known for his work 
upon paleozoic invertebrates, at Cincinnati, December 19, aged 61. 
— Dr. Wilhelm Mörike, docent in geology in the University of Frei- 
burg, and known from his studies of the geology of South America. 
— Alberto Perugia, ichthyologist, in Genoa, September 24, aged 54. 
— Johann Schaschl, coleopterist, at Unterburg, Austria, September 
26.— Dr. A. Schrauf, professor of mineralogy in the University of 
Vienna, aged 60.— Dr. Friedrich Wilhelm Snyder, botanist, at 
Braunsberg, Prussia, aged 87. — Rev. Gustav Standfuss, student of 
Lepidoptera (father of Max Standfuss), October 6, aged 82.— Dr. 
Otto Volger, mineralogist and geologist, in Sulsbach, October 18, 
aged 75. — Capt. E. Y. Watson, student of Lepidoptera, in India. 
