Frank Howe Bradley
American geologist
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(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Frank Howe Bradley was an American geologist. Bradley, son of Abijah and Eliza Collis Bradley, was born in New Haven, Conn., September 20, 1838 He graduated from Yale College in 1863. Through his undergraduate course he was partially employed in teaching in Gen. Russel's Collegiate and Commercial Institute in New Haven, at which school he was himself fitted for college. In the year 1863-4 he taught in Hartford, Conn., and spent the next year as a student in the Chemical Laboratory of the Sheffield Scientific School. His tastes early led him to the study of geology, and up to this time his vacations had been largely spent in the field in making collections of fossils. In the summer of 1865 he went to the Isthmus of Darien, and spent a year in that vicinity, obtaining large collections of corals and other zoological specimens, partly for the Yale Museum. During 1867 and 1868, he was assistant geologist in the Illinois survey, and in November of the latter year, became Professor of Natural Sciences in Hanover College, at Hanover, Ind. In September 1869, he left this position to accept the Professorship of Mineralogy and Geology in East Tennessee University, at Knoxville, and while there made some valuable geological explorations, which included the discovery of the fern named for him, asplenium bradleyi. He resigned this position in 1875, with the hope of so adding to his resources that he might be able with freedom to pursue his favorite science; and to this end he undertook the development of a gold mine in Northern Georgia, where he met his death from the falling of a bank in a gold mine, near Nacoochee, Ga., March 27, 1879
Frank Howe Bradley's Published Works
Published Works
- Description of two new land snails from the coal measures (1872) (1)
- Overlooking Port Lyttelton and township (0)
- Franklin County (First Annual Report of the Geological Survey of Indiana) (0)
- On the Silurian age of the southern Appalachians (1875) (0)
- On the Silurian age of the Southern Appalachians; Part II (1875) (0)
- Description of a new trilobite from the Potsdam sandstone [New York]; with a note by E. Billings (1860) (0)
- On a geological chart of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains and of Canada (1876) (0)
- Geology (First Annual Report of the Geological Survey of Indiana) (0)
- Explorations of 1872: U.S. Geological Survey of the Territories, under Dr. F. V. Hayden; Snake River division (1873) (0)
- Preliminary notice of certain beds of fish remains in the Hamilton group of western New York (1866) (0)
- Notice of some of the works of J. Barrande, with extracts from his remarks with reference to the mode of origin of Paleozoic species (1872) (0)
- Parke, Fountain, Warren, Owen, and Vermillion Counties (First Annual Report of the Geological Survey of Indiana) (0)
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