116 



SECTIONS. — INDEX OF AUTHORS* 



Calvo (Giovanni), the founder of the Monte 

 di Piet4 of Kome, 1841, 91. 



Cameron (Dr. C. A.) on urea as a direct 

 source of nitrogen to vegetation, 1857, 44. 



Cameron (P.) on the making and magneti- 

 zing of steel magnets, 1855, 10. 



* on the deviations of the compass in 



iron ships, 1855, 10. 



Campbell (Dugald) on the action of the 

 soap-test upon water containing a salt of 

 magnesia only, and likewise upon water 

 containing a salt of magnesia and a salt 

 of lime, 1850, 49. 



on Dr. Clarke's process for softening 



water, 1855, 54. 



Campbell (J. A.) on the auriferous quartz 

 formations of Australia, 1855, 81. 



Campbell (E.) on the probability of uni- 

 formity in statistical tables, 1859, 3. 



*Camps (Dr. W.)on an abnormal condition 

 of the nervous system, 1855, 121. 



on the laws of consanguinity and de- 

 scent of the Iroquois, 1859, 177. 



* on certainimperfect'yrecognized func- 

 tions of the optic thalami, 1859, 265. 



* on certain subjective sensations, with 



especial reference to the phenomena of 

 second sight, visions, and apparitions, 

 1859, 265. 



*Canino (Prince of) on the characters which 

 distinguish the little blue magpie of Spain 

 from that of Siberia, and on the new 

 Caprimulgus of Hungary, which belongs 

 to the genus Cordylis, 1849, 75. 



, zoologica notices, 1852, 72. 



, notice of his work ' Fauna Italica,' 



1843, 70. 



Canter (Dr.) on Malacca guano, 1845, 39. 



^Cardigan (Archdeacon of) on the site of 

 Ecbatana, 1856, ic8. 



Cargill (Mr.) on educational statistics of 

 Newcastle, 1838, 165. 



Carlile (H.) on the motions and sounds 

 of the heart, 1833, 454. 



• on the structure of the sacrum in man, 



&c., 1837, 112. 



on some remarkable malformations of 



the cerebellum, 1837, 113. 



on the functions of the human ear, 



1857, 116. 



Carlile (Warr and) on dials which give the 

 latitude, the line of ncrth and south, and 

 chronometer time, 1858, 41. 



Carmiciiael (R.) on cancerous and tuber- 

 culous diseases, 1836, 112. 



Carne (J.) on the mineral veins of Corn- 

 wall, 1831-32, 586. 



Carnegie (Hon. Capt.) on the earthquake 

 (Feb. 8, 1843) at the islands of Antigua 

 and G-uadaloupe, 1843, 59. 



^Carpenter (Eev. L.) on Lucas's method of 

 printing for the blind, 1836, 41. 



Carpenter (Marv) on the position of re- 

 formatory schools in reference to the 

 State, and their management, 1856, 134. 

 — on educational help from the Govern- 



ment Grant to the destitute and neglected 

 children of Great Britain, 1860, 184. 



Carpenter (P. P.) on land, freshwater, and 

 marine shells obtained in sinking a well 

 on the banks of the Avon, at Birlingham, 

 1854, 78. 



on shells from Mazatlan, 1854, 107. 



on peculiarities of growth in Caecidse, 



1857, 102. 



on the progress of natural science in 



the United States and Canada, 1860, 109. 



Carpenter (Capt.) on the duplex rudder 

 and screw propeller, 1851, 110. 



Carpenter (Dr. W. B.) on the microscopic 

 structure of shells, 1843, 71. 



on the position cf the compound Asci- 



dians in the zoological sea e, 1844, 66, 



, notice of his researches on the micro- 

 scopic character of she Is, and on repre- 

 senting natural-history objects by mean* 

 of phot graphy, 1846, 82. 



* on the structure of the Pycnogonideae, 



1846, 82. 



on the physiology of the encephalon, 



1846, 92. 



en phot ?graphy applied to mierosc:jftC 



objects, 1817, ^S. 



* on Marginopora and allied struc- 

 tures, 1843, 67. 



tn the development of the embryo of 



Purpura lapilius, 1854, 108. 



on the occurrence of the pentacrin id 



larva cf Comatula rosacea, in Lamlash 

 Bay, Isle of Arran, 1855, 107. 



tn the structure and development of 



OrbitoHtes c niplanatus, 1855, 107. 



*Carpenteii (W. E.) ..n the criteria by which 

 species are to be distinguished in zoology 

 and b:.tany, 1836, 99. 



*Carpmael (W.), meth d of rolling dove- 

 tailed gro. ves f^r railways, 1839, 131. 



Carrett (W. E.) on s me modern appli- 

 ances for raising water, 1858, 208. 



*Carrington (F. a.) on geographical maps 

 and models, 1847, 63. 



Carrington (Dr.) on the geological distribu- 

 tion of plants in some districts of York- 

 shire, 1858, 115. 



Carson (Dr.) on absorption, 1836, 119. 



on the motion of the bio d in the head, 



and on the uses cf the ventricles and con- 

 volutions of the brain, 1837, 123, 



on a case of unusual paralysis, 1842, 



85. 



Carson (J., jun.) on the uses of the mus- 

 cular fibres of the bronchial tubes, 1842, 

 80. 



*Carte (A. G.) on the use of rockets in 

 effecting a communication with stranded 

 vessels, 1849, 114. 



Carter (Mr.) on the jaws of an Ichthyosau- 

 rus from the chalk in the neighbourhood 

 of Cambridge, 1845, 60. 



Carus (Prof.) on the value of "develop- 

 ment " in systematic zoology and animal 

 morphology, 1860, 125. 



