Sidney Hugh Reynolds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sidney Hugh Reynolds DSc, FGS (18 December 1867 20 August 1949) was an English geologist, paleontologist, and zoologist who was born in Brighton.[1][2] He died in Clifton, Bristol, aged 81 leaving behind a widow and a daughter.[3]

Reynolds was educated at Marlborough College and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he received B.A. (Nat. Sci. Tripos, Pt I, 1st Class) 1889; (Pt II, 1st Class, 1890); M.A. 1894; Sc.D. 1913.[2] He was acting professor of zoology at Madras Christian College in 1891–1892 and in 1897–1898.[4] He taught Geology and Zoology at the University of Bristol in 1894 where he became an assistant professor in 1899 and then a professor in 1900.[2][3] In 1910 he was appointed the chair of geology, a position held until he retired as professor emeritus in 1933. an assistant professor of zoology and geology from 1899 to 1900, a professor of zoology and geology from 1900 to 1910, and a professor of geology from 1910 to 1933, when he retired as professor emeritus.[2][3] Following his retirement as a professor, Reynolds went on to become the curator of the Stroud District Cowle Museum.[1]

Selected publications

  • A Geological Excursion Handbook for the Bristol District. Bristol: J.W. Arrowsmith. 1912.
  • The Vertebrate Skeleton. Cambridge biological series. Cambridge University Press. 1897.
  • British Pleistocene Mammalia. Collected Monographs, 1906, 1909, 1911, etc. London: The Palaeontographical Society.

Photography

  • Photographs by Reynolds are held in the Conway Library at the Courtauld Institute of Art, and are currently being digitised.[5] 
  • He catalogued 5 photograph albums of the Orient and France, 1880-1925 for Bristol University Special Collections.[6]
  • Reynolds sat for a half-plate nitrate negative by Lafayette in 1929.[7]

Awards

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI