I 76 THE AMERICAN NATURALIST. [Vor. XXXVI. 
the Museum at Demerara, British Guiana. — Dr. Henry Woodward, from 
his position as keeper of geology in the British Museum. — Dr. John Young, 
from the chair of natural history in Glasgow, after thirty-five years of 
service. 
DEATHS. 
Lugui Maria D’Albertis, the ornithologist and explorer, in Sassari, early 
in September. — Dr. F. Arnold, lichenologist, in Munich, August 8, aged 
73. — F. J. Birtwell, ornithologist, by an accident, in New Mexico, June 28. 
— David Carnegie, botanist and explorer, on the Middle Niger, Nov. 27, 
1900, aged 30.— Albert Nelson Cheney, ichthyologist, at Glens Falls, 
N.Y., August 18. — Dr. J. H. Chievetz, director of the Anatomical Mu- 
seum at Copenhagen. — Professor Miguel Colmeiro, director of the botanical 
gardens at Madrid, aged 86. — Dr. Carl Cramer, professor of botany in the 
Polytechnicum at Zürich. — William Doherty, entomological and ornitho- 
logical collector in Nairoba, East Africa, May 25. — Dr. James Foulis, 
anatomist, in Edinburgh, October 17.— Prof. Dr. Robert Hartig of 
Munich forestry station, October to, aged 62.— Prof. Alfonso Herrera. 
in Mexico, Jan. 27, 1901, aged 67. — Dr. Federico Horstman y Cantos, 
professor of anatomy in the University of Havana. — Dr. Georg Jablo- 
nowski, assistant in the Anatomical Institute in Berlin, September 28. — 
Josef Bernhard Juch, cryptogamic botanist, in Constance, August 14, 
aged 83. — Clarence King, director of the United States Geological Sur- 
vey, 1878-1881, December 24, at Phoenix, Arizona. — James Walker Kirkby, 
geologist and student of fossil ostracodes, in Levin, Scotland, July 30, 
aged 66. — Dr. Arthur Kónig, professor extraordinary of physiology in the 
University at Berlin, October 26, aged 45.— Prof. A. A. Kowalevski, 
formerly professor of zoólogy in the University at St. Petersburg, Novem- 
22.— Dr. Albrecht von Krafft of the Indian Geological Survey in 
Allahabad, in September. — Jacob Heinrich Krelage, a Dutch botanist, 
December 1, aged 76. — Henri Lacaze-Duthiers, the eminent French zoólo- 
gist, July 21. — L. Liener, botanist in Constance, in May. — Rev. Hugh 
Alexander Macpherson, a Scotch zoólogist, aged 43. — Prof. M. Marcher, 
director of the Agricultural Experiment Station at Halle, Oct. 19, 1901. — 
Mr. Thomas Meehan, the well-known botanist, at Germantown, Pa., 
November 29, aged 75. — Charles F. Mohr, botanist in Asheville, N.C 
July 17. — Dr. H. Müggenburg, dipterologist in the Zoólogical Museum in 
Berlin, July 3. — Count Emil Neubauss, student of Lepidoptera, April 21, 
aged 57. — Henri Philibert, professor of botany in Aix, May 14, aged 79. 
— Dr. Max Reess, formerly professor of botany in the University at 
Erlangen, in Klingenmünster, September 14, aged 56.— Louis Schneider, 
botanist and entomologist, in Philadelphia, aged 65. — Dr. L. Serrurier, 
formerly director of the ethnological museum in Leiden, in Batavia, 
July 7. — Gene B. Simpson, student of fossil Polyzoa and a well-known 
paleontological artist, at Albany, N.Y., October 15. — Dr. Henry Spencer 
