Bernard Stonehouse

Bernard Stonehouse (1 May 1926 – 12 November 2014)[2] was a British scientist who specialised in animal behaviour, polar research and popular science.

[3][4][5] After returning to Britain in 1950, Stonehouse studied zoology and geology at University College, London,[5] and then earned his D.Phil.

from Edward Grey Institute of Field Ornithology and Merton College, Oxford,[3] which involved spending 18 months studying emperor penguins on South Georgia.

[4][5] He led the British Ornithologists' Union's centenary expedition to Ascension Island between 1957 and 1959.

[4][5] He retired as editor in 1992 but continued as a senior associate, forming the institute's Polar Ecology and Management Group, and promoting Antarctic tourism.

Stonehouse Bay , Antarctica (on the right in this picture), is named after Bernard Stonehouse.