Henry Hicks (1837–1899) was a Welsh physician and geologist during the 19th century.
Personal life
Henry Hicks was born on 26 May 1837 in the city of St Davids, Wales. His parents were Anne (née Griffiths) and surgeon Thomas Hicks. Hicks married Mary Richardson in February 1864, with whom he had three daughters.[1] He died on 18 November 1899 in Hendon, London.[2]
In St Davids, Hicks met palæontologistJohn William Salter, and became enamored with the burgeoning field of study. Hicks discovered a new Lingulella in the red, Cambrian-era rocks near his hometown, and wrote of it to the Geological Society of London. This earned him recognition and a grant from the British Science Association, leading him to find up to thirty more Cambrian species in 1868. Post-1868, Hicks included the higher Paleozoic-era strata in his searches. When he began his psychiatric work in Hendon Grove, this allowed Hicks much more time to devote to the geologic deposits in Middlesex.[1]
Hicks was active in the British Science Association,[1] Fellow and president of the Geologists' Association from 1883–1885,[4] and made a Fellow of the Royal Society on 4 June 1885. He was awarded the Bigsby Medal from the Geological Society in 1883, became secretary from 1890–1893, 46th president from 1896–1898, and vice-president in 1899 at the time of his death.[1]
HICKS, H. Results of recent Researches in some Bone-caves in North Wales (Fynnon Bueno and Cae Gwyn), By Henry Hicks, M.D., F.R.S., F.G.S.; with a Note on the Animal Remains, by W. Davies, Esq., F.G.S. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society for February 1886.
^"Henry Hicks (1837–1899)" (in Welsh). Countryside Council for Wales. Archived from the original on 30 October 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2020. Roedd Henry Hicks yn ddaearegydd amatur hynod alluog a etholwyd yn Llywydd y Gymdeithas Ddaearegol. Chwaraeodd ran ganolog yn un o ddadleuon mawr y cyfnod a oedd yn ymwneud ag oed y creigiau yn ardal Tyddewi, a disgrifiodd nifer o ffosilau newydd.
^Šnadjr, M. (1957). "Předběžná zpráva o novych trilobitech z českého středního kambria" [Preliminary report on new trilobites from the Czech Central Cambrian]. Věstník Ústředního Ústavu Geologického (in Czech). 32: 235–244.[verification needed]