Alfred John Jukes-Browne

Alfred John Jukes-Browne FRS FGS (16 April 1851 – 14 August 1914) was a British invertebrate palaeontologist and stratigrapher.

His uncle was the geologist Joseph Beete Jukes, well known for his work on the English and Irish geological surveys.

He was educated at Highgate School (1863–1868) and gained a BA at St John's College, Cambridge.

[1] He secured a post in 1874 on the staff of the Geological Survey and was chiefly occupied in mapping parts of Suffolk, Cambridge, Rutland, and Lincoln up to 1883 and then entrusted with the preparation of a monograph on the British Upper Cretaceous rocks.

He had married Emma Jessie Smith in 1881, who died giving birth to their second child in 1892.