480 DR. HENRY WOODWARD ON EAST ANGLIAN GEOLOGY. 
the Geology of Norfolk, and upon Chalk and Crag Fossils. His 
Manual of Recent and Fossil Shells attained to a sale of more 
than 11,000 copies. He was followed by his youngest brother, 
Dr. Henry Woodward, F.R.S., President of the Geological Society 
of London in 1894 — 96, who has lately completed forty-three years’ 
service in the same department, of which he was for a long time 
the Keeper ; he has also edited the Geological Magazine for 
thirty-nine years. 
B. B. Woodward, F.L.S., F.G.S. (British Museum, N. H.), son 
of the late Queen’s Librarian, has contributed various papers on 
Pleistocene Land and Freshwater Mollusca, and has edited the 
Proceedings of the Malacological Society of London, 1893-1903, 
of which Society he Avas one of the founders. 
B. H. Woodward, F.G.S. (son of S. P. Woodward), is now 
Director of the Perth Museum, Western Australia. His younger 
brother, Horace B. Woodward, F.R.S., F.G.S., is well known 
to the members as a past-President of this Society, and is now 
Assistant-Director of the Geological Survey of England and Wales 
H. P. Woodward, F.G.S., Assoc. Memb. Inst. C.E. (son of Henry 
Woodward), is Hon. Consulting Geologist and Mining Engineer to 
the Colony of Western Australia, and actively engaged in Mining 
Geology. A fifth grandson, Martin F. Woodward, (Hon. Sec. 
Malacological Society, and Demonstrator in Biology in the Royal 
College of Science), was lost to the world a year ago, after a brief 
hut brilliant career, being unfortunately drowned at Moyard, 
Connemara, in September, 1901. 
Sir Joseph Prestwich, D.C.L., F.R.S. (born 12th March, 1812, 
died 23rd June, 1896), some time Professor at Oxford, took 
a deep interest in the geology of the Eastern Counties, and together 
with Charlesworth and Searles Wood worked assiduously at the 
Geology of the Crag. We owe to Prestwich a comparison of the 
Suffolk Crag, with the Antwerp and other Belgian Crag deposits 
of a similar age. He wrote papers also upon the Drift deposits of 
Suffolk and those of the Norfolk Coast. 
Another eminent geologist (still surviving and now in His 85th 
year), is the Rev. Osmond Fisher, M. A., F.G.S. (born 1817), of 
Harlton near Cambridge, who has written on the “ Warp and Trail ” 
of Trimmer, studied the Mammalia of the Peat-deposit at Lexden, 
