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Samuel Hazzledine Warren

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{{Infobox rai-fellow
| first_name = Samuel Hazzledine
| name = Warren
| honorific_prefix =
| honorific_suffix = FGS etc
| image = File:Warren,_Samuel_Hazzledine.jpg
| birth_date = 1872
| death_date = 1958
| address = 9 Cambridge Gate, Regent’s Park, NW [1902]<br />Sherwood, Loughton, Essex [1903]
| occupation = archaeologist
| elected_ESL =
| elected_ASL =
| elected_AI = 1902.06.10
| elected_APS =
| elected_LAS =
| membership = ordinary fellow
| left = 1958 deceased
| clubs = Essex Field Club
| societies = Geological Society
}}
== Notes ==
=== Office Notes ===
RAI Council 1913 Member<br />RAI Council 1914 Member<br />RAI Council 1915 Member<br />RAI Council 1917 Member<br />RAI Council 1918 Member<br />RAI Council 1919 Member<br />RAI Council 1922 Member<br />RAI Council 1923 Member<br />RAI Council 1924 Member<br />RAI Council 1926 Member<br />RAI Council 1927 Member<br />RAI Council 1928 Member<br />RAI Council 1937-38 Member<br />RAI Council 1938-39 Member<br />RAI Council 1939-40 Member
=== House Notes ===
Proposed by C.H. Read; seconded by J.L. Myres, 1902.05.27<br />1958.03.27 deceased<br />1958.05.01 death noted<br />
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
Samuel Hazzledine Warren (archaeologist; collector;<br />Warren was born and brought up in Essex, the son of a wholesale merchant. He entered the family business but was able to retire to concentrate on geology and archaeology in 1903. Most of his fieldwork was carried out in Essex notably at the Middle Pleistocene sites (c.400,000 years old) of the Clacton area where he identified the Clactonian industry and found the tip of one of the oldest known wooden spears. He also researched late Glacial deposits in the Lee Valley. He was a prominent member of the Essex Field Club, the Geologists' Association where he recieved the Stopes Medal and the Geological Society. He published many papers about his fieldwork and made significant contributions to early 20th century debate on a chronological framework for the Quaternary period. In 1936 he gave part of his collection, including the Clacton spear to The Natural History Museum and bequethed the remainder to the British Museum. He acquired a single artefact from Mozambique by unknown means.<br />Bibliography<br />Oakley, K.P. 1959. The Life and Work of Samuel Hazzledine Warren, FGS. Essex Naturalist 30, 143-161<br /><br /><br /><br />
== Publications ==
=== External Publications ===
Prehistory in Essex, 1918<br />
=== House Publications ===
1919.03.11 read The dating of surface flint implements and the evidence of the submerged peat surfaces illustrated by specimens and lantern slides<br />An Early Mesolithic Site at Broxbourne Sealed Under Boreal Peat; by S. Hazzledine Warren, J. G. D. Clark, H. Godwin, M. E. Godwin and W. A. Macfadyen in JRAI Vol. 64 (Jan. - Jun., 1934), pp. 101-128
== Related Material Details ==
=== RAI Material ===

=== Other Material ===
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