INDEX. 



499 



Crabs, land, 490. 



Critique on the terra noble, 221. 



Crocodile, notice of a tame, one, 73 ; remains of 



a stupendous, 74. 

 Cromer, section of part of a cliff west of, 260. 

 Crossbill, remark on the, 394. 

 Crow with red legs, 394. 

 Cruciferse, description of, 141. 

 Crystallisation of gold, on the, by the Rev. John 



Stevens Henslow, 146. 

 Curtis's Botanical Magazine for April, 1828, 

 review of, 59 ; May, 163 j June, 165 ; July, 

 274. 

 Curtis's British Entomologv for April, 1828, 



reviewed, 54 ; May, 160 ; June, 272. 

 Curwillet, figured and described, by J. M., 297. 

 Cuttle fish, 278. 

 Cuvierian, or natural, system of zoology, 97. 



309 

 Cuvier's Discours sur les Revolutions de la Sur- 

 face du Globe, &c. &c., 175 ; Histoire Natu- 

 relle des Mammifdres, 63; Cuvier's System, 

 14. 

 Cypr^V, from Ci/pris, one of the names of Ve- 

 ' nus, 26. 

 Dargassies's Lettres h Anais sur la Botanique, 



63. 

 Davies, J. H., Esq., on the instinct of insects, 



332. 

 De CandoUe's Collection de Mt'^moires pour ser- 

 vir h. 1' Histoire de Rfegne Vegetal, and Prodro- 

 mus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis, 

 noticed, 280. 

 Deciduous scale on the bills of birds, 200. 

 Delta of the Oroonoko and the Maragnon, 391. 

 Demerara river, scenery on, 390. 

 Descourtils's Flore Pittoresque, &c., 63. 

 Desvaux's Flore de 1' Anjou, &c. &c., 175. 

 Devotion to nature, 370. 

 Diandria, 234. 236. 

 Dichlam^deae, from dis, two, and ehlamys, a 



coat, 136 ; description of, 136. 

 Dicotyl^dones, dis, two, and cotyledon, 136. 

 Dicotyl^dones figured and described, 34. 

 Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles, &c., 63. 

 Digynia, order of, described, 433. 

 Dilleniace^^) description of, 138. 

 Dinner in commemoration of Ray, 408. 

 Dioscbrtfa, from P. Discorides, a Greek physi- 

 cian, 164. 

 Dipsacus, from dipsa, thirst, 431. 

 Domestication of mammiferous animals, 171. 

 Dorsal, from dorsum, the back, 162. 

 Droserkceas, 335. 

 'DryanAxbides, from Dryandra, and eidos,'\\k.e, 



362. 

 Duck, curious one, by H. S., 377. 

 Dupont's Trait6 de Taxidermie, &c. &c., 174, 

 Eagle and the hawk, characteristics of, 94. 

 Eagle, large one caught, 84. 

 Earwig, natural history of, 168. 

 East winds, 180. 



Edinburgh, rare plants near, 292. 

 Education, remarks on natural history as a 



means of, 10. 

 Edwards's Botanical Register for April, 1828, 

 reviewed, 59; May, 165: June, 166: Julv, 

 274. 

 Elef:tricity as an agent in the movements of the 



spider, 158. 

 Ellis's work on corals, &c., by WiHlam Battcrs- 



ly, 177. 

 Embryo in grasses, 283. 

 Emmons's Manual of Mineralogy and Geology, 



&c., 176. 

 Emys, large fragment of, 187. 

 Enchanter's Nightshade, from the enchantress 



Circe, 235. 

 Engelspack's Essai Geognostique sur les Envi- 

 rons de St. Petersbourg, 176. 

 Entomology, from entoma, insects, and logos, a 



discourse, 421. 

 Epipactis latifblia, 393. 

 Erddium cicutarium^remark on, by E. K., 378. 



Eri6phorum, 240. 



Evaporation on mountains, 231. 



Examen dedeuxMt^moires de Physiologic Vde^- 



tale, &c. &c., 175. ^ 



Eyes of crabs and lobsters, 373. 

 Faculties of brutes, 377. 



Falcons, Great-footed, 48; of Great Britain, 

 arrangement of the different species of. bv 

 T. F.,217. ' ^ 



Fasciol&ria, from fasciolft, a winding band, 56 

 Father Lasher, figured, 277. 

 Fauna for June and July, 295; August, 296 



402 ; September, 402 ; October, 403. 

 F^e's Notice sur les Productions Naturelles de 



risle de Java, 175. 

 Feline animals, characteristics of, 371. 

 I-erussac's Bulletin des Sciences Naturelles, &c., 



63. 

 Filament described, 232. 

 Fish-hawk, 95. 

 Fish, migration of, 372. 

 Fishes of the Lake of Geneva, works on, 282. 

 Fishes peculiar to certain lakes, 487. 

 Fitton, W. H., M.D. F.R.S. &c., his address to 



the Geological Society, 75. 78. 

 Flacourtiancce, 333. 

 Floating Island, 283. 

 F15ra Altaica, 74. 



Flbra Australasica for April, 1828, reviewed. 61 • 

 May, 167 ; June, 167. ' 



Flbra B^lgica, 387. 

 Flbra Classica, 485." 

 Flora for June and July, 295 ; August, 296. 402 ; 



September, 402 ; October, 403. 

 Flbra Helvetica, by M. T. Gaudin, 73. 

 FJbra Hib^rnica, contributions towards a, by 

 Edward Murphy, Esq. A.B,, Trinity College, 

 Dublin, 436. 

 Flbra Mt^dica, &c., 62. 

 Flbra Virgilikna, 484. 

 Flowers, beauty of, 128; proliferous, 387. 

 Floyd's Observations on Dog-breaking, re- 

 viewed, 172. 

 Flycatcher, Pied, manners and economy of, by 

 John Blackwall, Esq., 331; the Red-eyed, 

 song of, 420 ; the White-eyed, song of, 420 ; 

 spotted, nest of the, by Edwin Lees, 394. 

 FoliacccB, from foliaceus, leafy, 136. 

 Foliage of the oak, figured and described, 245. 

 Fontelle's Manuel de I'Herboriste, &c., 64. 

 Fontenelle's Bibliotheque Physico-Economique, 



&c. &c., noticed, 466. 

 Footmarks in sandstone, 69. 144. 

 Foreign migratory birds, 496. 

 Forest trees of Europe, as elements of land- 



scape, by J. G. Strutt, 37. 242. 

 Formation of soils on a small scale, 179. 

 Fossils, query respecting, by Vectis, 300. 

 Fossil remains of two species of Mastodon and 



other vertebrated animals, 185. 

 Fossil shell attached to a flint, 69. 

 Foul water of fishermen, query on, 198. 

 Francisceo, from Francis, Emperor of Germany, 

 165. "" 



Frankeniflc^te, 337. 

 French philosophers, remarks on those of the 



present age, 66. 

 Fresh-water Fishes of Great Britain, by Mrs, 



T. Edward Bowdich, 53. 

 Fries's Ursachen der Erdbeben, &c., 175. 

 Fritillkria tessellata, habitation and figure, by 



D. S., 289. 

 ;^rogs kept for prognosticating the weather, 479 ; 



^all ones attached to leaves, 284. 

 Gallinas, from gallus, a cock, 121. 

 Gaudin's Flbra Helvetica noticed, 73. 

 Geoffroy's Shrike figured, 276. 

 Generalisation of the objects of natural history, 



remarks on, 11. 

 Genera of recent and fossil shells, &c., by George 



Brettingham Sowerby, F.L.S., reviewed, 56. 

 Generation of insects, Redi's experiments on, 



by T. S. H., 221. 

 Geography of animals, 388. 



