504 



NDEX. 



Truffle, organisation and reproduction of, 380. 



Tr6ncus, in insects, 423. 



Tubulkria rambsa, 278. 



Tulip and ranunculus, difference between, in 

 their physiological structure, 2. 



Turkeys, young ones noticed and figured, 46. 



Turtle doves of Carolina, 48, 



Tuscany, ornithology of, 282. 



Tussac's Flore des Antilles, &c., 63. 



Tyrian purple, 373. 389. 



Valvata piscinalis, 425. 



Vasculares and Cellul^res, tabular view of their 

 systematic subdivisions, 136. 



Vasculares, figured and described, 33. 



Vascultires, from vns, a vessel, 136. 



Vegetable and animal remains, and rocks, col- 

 lection of, 186. 



Vegetables and animals, on the distinctive cha- 

 racters of, 97 to 108. 



Vegetation, experiments on, 378. 



Ventral, from venter, the belly, 162. 



Vertebrated animals described, 104. 



Fespertilio, from vesperiilio, a bat, 163. 



Vesuvius, eruption of Mount, 181. 



Vignette on the cover, critique on, by A Lover 

 of Nature, 302 ; apology for, 302. 



Vigors's Zoological Journal noticed, 61. 278. 



Vimon, M., notice of his collection of sculls, 72. 



Violet, diffusion of seeds in the, by J. Rennie, 

 379. 



Vittktus, from vitta, a band, 163. 



Umbel explained, 429. 



Volcano at Bakon, in Persia, 286. 



Volitans, from volito, to fly about, 162. 



Walnut tree, large trunk of a, 288. 



Warwickshire, plants found in, varying with 

 white flowers, by W. T. Bree, 393. 



Water rail figured and described, 289, 



Water-spouts figured and described, 458. 



Waterton's Wanderings in South America, &c., 



reviewed, 365. 

 Weald denudation, geological position of, 264. 

 Weald, arrangement of, 256. 

 Weather of July and August, 296; of August, 



September, and October, 403. 

 Wernerian Natural History Society, meetings 



of, 84. 291. 

 Whale, an enormous one, 283. 

 Wha-ra-rai mountain, ascent and barometrical 



measurement of, communicated by Mr. Men. 



zies, 201. 

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

 Wiegmann's Observationes Zoologicse, &c., 175. 

 Willughbie^, from Willughby, a friend of 



Ray's, 273. 

 Wilson's Illustrations of Zoology, reviewed, 52. 

 Wind reels, on the modification of the clouds 



so called, 454, 

 Woodcock's nest, 83. 

 Woodpecker, critique respecting the least, by 



W. T. Bree, 301. 

 Woodpeckers, family of Red-headed, 49. 

 Woods's Introductory Lecture on the Study of 



Zoology, 62. 

 Worm of corruption, query respecting, by S. T. , 



Wren, the Marsh and the House, notes of the, 



420. 

 Yarmouth, rare birds shot in the neighbourhood 



of, by T. W. S., 290. 

 Zoological Society, origin and notice of, 78; 



meeting of April 29th, 188 ; May 14th, 188 ; 



regulations of, 188. 

 Zoology, advantage and pleasures of the scien- 

 tific knowledge of, 3 ; on the Cuvierian, or 



natural, system of, 97. 309. 

 Zygop^talon, from zvgos, a pair, petalon, z. petal, 



163. 



END OF THE FIRST VOLUME. 



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