From 1831–50 Stutchbury was
curator of the museum at the Bristol Institution (now
Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery). Fossil finds from excavations that he carried out at
Bristol with local naturalist Henry Riley led to their announcement of
Thecodontosaurus in 1836. This was only the fourth dinosaur genus to be named, although it was originally omitted from the group
Dinosauria when the group was named by
Richard Owen in 1842. In 1841 Stutchbury became a Fellow of the
Geological Society of London. From 1850–55 he worked as a geological and mineral surveyor in
Australia. Originally appointed to survey the New South Wales gold finds, he eventually mapped 32,000 square miles (over 82,000 square km) from
New South Wales to
Queensland. Stutchbury died on 12 February 1859 in
Bristol. A number of fossil and recent organisms have been named after him. ==References==