Vol. 58. ] ANNUAL REPORT. xi 
from the Lyell Geological Fund, is awarded to Prof. Anton Fritsch, 
in recognition of his contributions to the Paleontology of the 
Paleozoic Rocks of Bohemia. 
The other Lyell Medal, together with a sum of Twenty-five Pounds 
from the Lyell Geological Fund, is awarded to Mr. Richard Lydekker, 
in recognition of his valuable additions to our knowledge of the 
Paleontology of the Vertebrata, especially in India and South 
America. 
The Balance of the Proceeds of the Wollaston Donation Fund is 
awarded to Mr. Leonard James Spencer, in recognition of his services 
_to Mineralogy, and to encourage him in further research. 
The Balance of the Proceeds of the Murchison Geological Fund 
is awarded to Mr. Thomas H. Holland, as an acknowledgement of 
his contributions to the study of the Rocks of British India, and to 
assist him in further work. | 
The Balance of the Proceeds of the Lyell Geological Fund is 
awarded to Dr. Wheelton Hind, in recognition of the value of his 
researches among the Carboniferous Rocks of Great Britain, and to 
stimulate him to further work. i 
A sum of Twenty-one Pounds from the Proceeds of the Barlow- 
Jameson Fund is awarded to Mr. William Maynard Hutchings, in 
recognition of his valuable contributions to Petrology, and to en- 
courage him in further work. 
Report oF THE LIBRARY AND Muspum Committees For 1901. 
The Additions made to the Library show no falling off, either 
in number or interest, from the usual standard. 
During 1901 the Library received by donation 186 Volumes of 
separately published Works, 291 Pamphlets and detached Parts of 
Works, 186 Volumes and 60 detached Parts of Serial Publications, 
and 18 Volumes of Newspapers. 
The total number of accessions to the Library by Donation is thus 
seen to amount to 390 Volumes, 291 Pamphlets, and 60 detached 
Parts. 
The number of Maps, which have been presented by various 
Donors, is also considerable. Without reckoning the 12 latest 
published folios of the Geologic Atlas of the United States, 200 
Sheets of Maps were received, 58 of which were Ordnance Survey 
Maps. 
Although the task of selection from among the numerous Dona- 
tions mentioned in the foregoing paragraphs is necessarily difficult, 
your Committee may perhaps be allowed to direct special attention 
to the following :—The late Lady .Prestwich’s Essays, Descriptive 
& Biographical (with a Memoir by her sister, Louisa EK. Milne); 
the late Prof. Lindstrém’s ‘ Researches on the Visual Organs of the 
Trilobites*; Mr. A. C. Seward’s Catalogue of the Mesozoic Plants 
