, 1913 Reid was born in London in 1853. His great uncle was
Michael Faraday. His family circumstances meant he was largely self-taught but he was nonetheless able to join the
Geological Survey of Great Britain in 1874 and be employed in drawing up geological maps in various parts of the country. In 1894 he was appointed Geologist and in 1901 District Geologist. He retired in 1913. He was particularly concerned with
tertiary geological deposits and their paleontology, and is most renowned for the work he did on
quaternary and
Pliocene deposits alongside his wife Eleanor in Norfolk. In 1913 he published his book
"Submerged Forests" in which he postulated a drowned land bridge between eastern England and the European mainland. His conceptual map of what is now called "
Doggerland" turned out to be remarkably close to the currently known reality. He died in
Milford-on-Sea, Hampshire in 1916. He had married in St Asaph in 1897
Eleanor Mary Wynne Edwards. She became a fellow herself and won the
Lyell Medal for her work after Reid died. ==References==