George Busk

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George Busk RN FRS (12 August 180710 August 1886), was a British Naval surgeon, zoologist and palaeontologist.

Funerary monument, Kensal Green Cemetery, London
Funerary monument, Kensal Green Cemetery, London

Busk was born in St Petersburg, the son of the merchant Robert Busk.

He studied surgery in London, at both St Thomas' and St Bartholomew's hospitals, and was appointed assistant-surgeon to the Greenwich Hospital in 1832. He served as naval surgeon first in the HMS Grampus.

Later Busk served for many years in HMS Dreadnought, which had fought at Trafalgar In Busk's time it was used by the Seamen's Hospital Society as a hospital ship for ex-members of the Merchant Navy or fishing fleet and their dependants. During this period Busk made important observations on cholera and on scurvy.

In 1855, he retired from service and settled in London, where he devoted himself mainly to the study of zoology and palaeontology. As early as 1842, he assisted in editing the Microscopical Journal; and later he edited the Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science (1853-68) and the Natural History Review (1861-65). He was a member of the famous X-Club founded by Huxley, which was active in revitalising science in the period 1865-1885. Busk and his wife Ellen were close friends of Huxley.

From 1856-59, he was Hunterian Professor of Comparative Anatomy and Physiology in the Royal College of Surgeons, and he became President of the college in 1871. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1850. Busk was an active member of the Linnean Society, the Geological Society and president of the Anthropological Institute (1873-74). He received the Royal Society's Royal Medal and the Geological Society's Wollaston and Lyell medals.

He was the leading authority on the Polyzoa; and later the vertebrate remains from caverns and river-deposits occupied his attention. He was a patient and cautious investigator, full of knowledge, and unaffectedly simple in character. He died in London on the 10 August 1886, and is buried at Kensal Green Cemetery, London.

[edit] Awards

Awards
Preceded by
William Hallowes Miller
Royal Medal
1871
Succeeded by
John Stenhouse
Awards
Preceded by
James Hector
Lyell Medal
1878
Succeeded by
Edmond Hebert
Awards
Preceded by
Alfred Des Cloizeaux
Wollaston Medal
1885
Succeeded by
Albert Jean Gaudry
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