RELATIONSHIP. 



INDEX. 



ROBERTSON. 



459 



Relationship, terms of, ii. 360. 



Religion, deficiency of, among cer- 

 tain races, i. 65 ; psychical elements 

 of, i. 68. 



Remorse, i. 91 ; deficiency of, among 

 savages, i. 164. 



Rengger, on the diseases of Cehus 

 Azarde,\. 11; on maternal affection 

 in a Cebus, i, 40 ; revenge taken by 

 monkeys, i. 40 ; on the reasoning 

 powers of American monkeys, i. 

 47 ; on the use of stones by mon- 

 keys for cracking hard nuts, i. 51 ; 

 on the sounds uttered by Cebus 

 Azarm, i. 54 ; on the signal-cries 

 of monkeys, i. 57 ; on the diversity 

 of the mental faculties of monkeys, 

 i. 110; on the Payaguas Indians, i. 

 117 ; on the inferiority of Eu- 

 ropeans to savages in their senses, 

 i. 118 ; on the polygamous habits 

 of Mycetes carai/a, i. 266 ; on the 

 voice of the howling monkeys, ii. 

 277 ; on the odour of Cerviis cam- 

 pestris, ii. 279 ; on the beards of 

 Mycetes caraya and Piihccia Sata- 

 nas, ii. 283 ; on the colours of Felis 

 mitis, ii, 287 ; on the colours of 

 Cervus paludosus, ii. 290 ; on sexual 

 differences of colour in Mycetes, ii. 

 291 ; on the colour of the infant 

 Guaranys, ii. 318 ; on the early 

 maturity of the female of Cehus 

 azaree, ii. 318 ; on the beards of 

 the Guaranys, ii. 322, 323 ; on the 

 emotional notes employed by mon- 

 keys, ii. 336 ; on American polyga- 

 mous monkevs, ii. 362. 



Representative species, of birds, ii. 

 190, 191. 



Reproduction, unity of phenomena 

 of, throughout the mammalia, i. 

 13 ; period of, in birds, ii. 214. 



Reproductive system, rudimentary 

 structures in the, i. 30 ; accessory 

 parts of, i. 207. 



Reptiles, ii. 28. 



Reptiles and birds, alliance of, i. 213. 



Resemblances, small, between man 

 and the apes, i. 191. 



Retrievers, exercise of reasonincr 

 faculties by, i. 48. 



Revenge, manifested by animals, i. 

 40. 



Reversion, i. 122 ; perhaps the cause 

 of some bad dispositions, i. 173. 



Bhagium, difference of colour in the 

 sexes of a species of, i. 367. 



Rhamphastos cariyiatus, ii. 227. 



Rhinoceros, nakedness of, i. 148; 

 horns of, ii. 247 ; horns of, used de- 

 fensively, ii. 263 ; attacking white 

 or grey horses, ii. 295. 



Hhi/nchsea, sexes and young of, ii. 

 202. 



Ehynchssa australis, ii. 203. 



Rhynchsea bengalensis, ii. 203. 



Rhynchsea capensis, ii. 202. 



Rhythm, perception of, by animals, 

 ii. 333. 



Richard, M., on rudimentary mus- 

 cles in man, i. 19. 



Richardson, Sir J., on the pairing of 

 Tetrao umbelhis, ii. 49 ; on Tctrao 

 urophasianus, ii. 58 ; on the drum- 

 ming of grouse, ii. 63 ; on the 

 dances of Tetrao phasianellus, ii. 

 69 ; on assemblages of grouse, ii. 

 101 ; on the battles of male deer, 

 ii. 240 ; on the reindeer, ii. 244 ; 

 on the horns of the musk-ox, ii. 

 247 ; on antlers of the reindeer 

 with numerous points, ii. 252 ; on 

 the moose, ii. 259. 



Richardson, on the Scotch deer- 

 hound, ii. 261. 



Richter, Jean Paul, on imagination, 

 i. 45. 



Riedel, on profligate female pigeons, 

 ii. 119. 



Ring-ouzel, colours and nidification 

 of the, ii. 170. 



Ripa, Father, on the difficulty of 

 distinguishing the races of the 

 Chinese, i. 215. 



Rivalry, in singing, between male 

 birds, ii. 53. 



RiVER-fiOG, African, tusks and knobs 

 of the, ii. 266. 



Rivers, analogy of, to islands, i. 

 204. 



Roach, brightness of male during 

 breeding-season, ii. 13. 



Robbery, of strangei-s, considered 

 honourable, i. 94. 



Robertson, Mr., remarks on the 

 development of the horns in the 

 roebuck and red-deer, i. 288. 



