SECTIONS. INDEX OF AUTHORS. 



121 



Cox (H.) on the parallelogram of mechanic 



cal magnitudes, 1851, i. 

 * on the submergence of telegraphic 



cables, 1869, ii. 

 Craig (Rev. E.) on polarization, 1836, 19. 

 Craig (J.) on the coal formation of the 



west of Scotland, 1840, 89. 

 , notice of sections of the railways be- 

 tween Glasgow and Greenock, and G-reen- 



ock and Ayr, 1841, 67. 

 Crane (G.) on the smelting of iron with 



anthracite coal, 1837, 52. 

 Crawford (Dr.) on a case of anthracosis 



in a lead -miner, 1838, 130. 

 ^Crawford (J.) on the Malay languages, 



1847, 119. . . 



, vital statistics of a district in Java, 



1848, 112. 



en the alphabet of the Indian Archi- 

 pelago, 1849, 83. 



^— on the oriental words adopted in Ung- 

 glish, 1849, 84. 



on the negro races of the Indian 



Archipelago and Pacific Islands, 1851, 

 86. 



* on the geography of Borneo, with 



description of the condition of the island, 

 and its chief products, illustrated by his- 

 torical references, 1851, 88. 



*- on the different centres of civiliza- 

 tion, 1855, 141. 



• on the effects of the gold of Australia 



and California, 1857, 160. 



on the effects of commixture, locality, 



climate, and food on the races of man, 

 1858, 149. 



on the relation of the domesticated 



animals to civilization, 1859, 177. 



on the effects of the influx of the pre- 

 cious metals which fo. lowed the disco- 

 very of America. 1859, 205. 



* on the effects of the recent gold dis- 

 coveries, 1859, 205. 



on the Aryan cr Indo-Germanic theory 



of races, 1860, 1 54. 



— — on the influence of domestic ani- 

 mals on the progress of civilization, 1860, 



155- 



^^Croall (Mr.) on the more remarkable 

 plants found in Braemar, 1859, 133 



Cronin (Mr.) on the statistical results of 

 amputation, 1843, 84. 



Crook (Dr. W. H.) on the unity of the coal- 

 deposits of England and Wales, 1837, 



75- , . , 



■ on a supposed connexion between an 



insufficient use of salt in f.od and the 



progress of Asiatic cholera, 1848, 88. 

 Crosse (A.) on the formation of artificial 



crystals, 1836, 47. 



on the apparently mechanical action 



accompanying electric transfer, 1854, 

 66. 



Crosse (Mrs.) on the apparent mechani- 

 cal action accompanying electrical trans- 

 fer, 1855, 55. 



Crosskill (A.) on reaping-machinery, 1863, 

 114 ; 1858, 209. 



Crowe (J. R.) on the climate of Norway 

 and Finmark, 1844, 27. 



, meteorological observations for the 



year 1844 at Christiania, 1846, 19 ; 1846, 

 12; 1847, 33. 



Cruicksiiank (A.) on the natural obstruc- 

 tions in the atmosphere preventing the 

 view of distant objects on the earth's sur- 

 face, 1859, 49. 



Crum (W.) on the ageing of mordants in 

 calico-printing, 1859, 258. 



Cull (R.) on the misapplication of the 

 terms 'evolution' and 'development,' as 

 applied by etlmographical philologists to 

 the inflections of a language, 1852, 82. 



* on Blumenbach's classification of the 



human race, 1852, 84. 



* on the ethnological value of the re- 

 sults of philological inquiry, 1854, 126. 



* , description of three Esquimaux lately 



exhibited in London, 1854, 126. 



manual of ethnological inquiry and 



the ethnology of Polynesia, 1855, 141. 



on some water-colour portraits of 



natives of Van Diemen's Land, 1855, 

 142. 



* on the complexion and hair of the 



ancient Egyptians, 1855, 142. 

 * on a more positive knowledge of the 



changes, both physical and mental, in 



man, with a view to ascertain their causes, 



1856, ic8. 



on the character, extent, and ethno- 

 logical value of the Indo-European ele- 

 ment in the language of Finland, 1867, 

 127. 



* on Dr. Prichard's identification of the 



Russians with the Roxolani, 1858, 148. 



* on certain remarkable deviations in 



the stature of Europeans, 1860, 155. 



* on the existence cf a true plural of 



the personal pronoun in a living Euro- 

 pean language, 1&60, 155. 



CuLLEN (General), cbservations of the fall 

 of rain on the coast of Travanccre and 

 table-land of Uttree, 1846, 22. 



■ , bare metrical levelings in the Madras 



Presidency, 1847, 42. 



on the fall of rain on the table-land 



of Uttree Mullay, Travancore, 1848, 



39- 



CuLLEN (Dr.) on the gold-mines of the 

 Isthmus of Darien, emigration to New 

 Granada, and canalization of the Isthmus 

 of Darien, 1850, 79. 



* on a proposed canal across the Isth- 

 mus of Darien, 1851, 88. 



*CuLLBy (Mr.), notice of the plans for the 

 transmission of time-signals through the 

 telegraph wires in connexion with the ob- 

 servatory at Greenwich. 1854, 148. 



CuMMiNG (Rev. Prof J.) on some electro- 

 magnetic instruments, 1833, 418. 



on an instrument for measuring the 



