SECTIONS. — INDEX OF AUTHORS. 



143 



the 16th, 17th, and 19th centuries, 1842, 



*Hbywood (J.), abstractor the report of the 

 French Minister of Public Instruction on 

 the higher schools of France, 1843, 96. 



■ on the university statistics of Ger- 

 many, 1845, 86. 



- on the comparatire number of degrees 

 taken at Cambridge in the 17th and 19th 

 centuries, 1845, 86. 



, Oxford University statistics, 1846, 98. 



on the revenues of the University and 



some of the Colleges of Oxford, 1852, 



118. 



on public service, academic, and 



teachers' examinations, 1858, 176. 



IIiBBERT (Dr.) on the ossiferous beds of the 

 Forth, the Clyde, andthcTay, 1834, 642. 



, J). Page on the freshwater limestone 



of, 1855, 91. 



HiGGiN (J.) on the colouring matters of 

 madder, 1848, 54. 



HiGGiNs (Eev. H. H.) on the death of the 

 common hive bee, supposed to be occa- 

 sioned by a parasitic fungus, 1858, 124. 



on the liability of shells to injury from 



the growth of a fungus, 1858, 128. 



on some specimens of shells from the 



Liverpool Museum, 1860, 116. 



HiGHLEY (S.) on the management of some 

 difficult subjects in the application of 

 photography to science, 1854, 69. 



on the means of applying photography 



to war purposes in the army and navy, 

 1854, 70. 



• , Crystallogenesis, and the equivalent 



in the mineral kingdom corresponding to 

 geographical distribution in the animal 

 and vegetable kingdoms, 1856, 172. 



Hill (T. W.) on a system of numerical 

 notation, 1845, 4. 



Hills (G-. M.) on the round towers of Ire- 

 land, 1857, 133. 



HiNCKs (Eev. Dr. E.) on the language and 

 mode of writing of the ancient Assy- 

 rians, 1850, 140. 



on the ethnological bearing of the 



recent discoveries in connexion with the 

 Assyrian inscriptions, 1852, 85. 



on the forms of the personal pro- 

 nouns of the two first persons in the In- 

 dian, Eiwopean, Syro-Arabic and Egyp- 

 tian languages, 1852, 88. 



on certain ancient mines, 1852, 1 10. 



on the eclipse of the smi mentioned in 



the first book of Herodotus, 1856, 27. 



on the relation between the newly- 

 discovered Accadian language and the 

 Indo-European, Semitic, and Egyptian 

 languages ; with remarks on the original 

 values of Semitic letters, and on the state 

 of the Greek alphabet at different periods, 

 1857, 134- 



on recorded observations of the planet 



Venus in the 7th century before Christ, 

 I860, 35. 



HiNCKS (Rev. Dr. E.) on certain ethnologi-^ 

 cal boulders and their probable origin, 

 1860, 156. 



HiNCKS (Rev. T.) on a peculiar organ which 

 occurs on some of the marine Bryozoa, 

 and which appears to indicate a difference 

 of sex, 1852, 75. 



on a new species of Laomedea (L. an- 



gulata), with remarks on the genera Cam- 

 panularia and Laomedea, 1858, 126. 



on some new and interesting forms of 



British zoophytes, 1858, 128. 



HiNCKS (Rev. W.) on vegetable monstrosi- 

 ties, 1838, 120. 



on abnormal forms in the flowers of 



Fuchsia, 1843, 78. 



, notice of the Neottia gemmipara, dis- 

 covered in CO. Cork, 1843, 78. 



'"^ on an anomaly of the Trifolium re- 

 pens, 1852, 66. 



HiNDMARSH (J.) on the wild cattle of Chil- 

 liugham Park, 1838, 100. 



on the state of agriculture and the 



condition of the agricultural labourers in 

 the north of Northumberland, 1^38, 167. 



*HiSLOP (Rev. S.) on the aboriginal tribes 

 of the province of Nagpore, 1859, 266. 



Hitchcock (Rev. Prof.) on foot-impressions 

 in the new red sandstone, 1837, 60. 



on the erosions of the earth's surface, 



especially by rivers, 1850, 85. 



on terraces and ancient sea-beaches, 



especially those on the Connecticut river 

 and its tributaries in New England, 1850, 



'fHiTCiiMAN (J.) on sanitary drainage of 

 towns, 1860, 191. 



^HociiSTETTER (Prof. F. vou) on the geo- 

 logy of New Zealand, 1860, 8 1. 



* on the geological features of the vol- 

 canic island of St. Paul, 1860, 81. 



* on a new map of the interior of the 



Northern island of New Zealand, 1860, 1 62. 



Hodge (H. C) on the origin of the ossi- 

 ferous caverns at Oreston, 1859, no. 



Hodges (Prof. J. F.) on the phosphatic 

 nodules of the greensand of the north 

 of Ireland, 1852, 36. 



HoDGKm (Dr.) on the effects of poisons on 

 the animal economy, 1834, 681. 



, notice relative to the varieties of the 



human race, 1842, 70. 



■ on the dog as the associate of man, 



1844, 81. 



on the stature of the Guanches, the 



extinct inhabitants of the Canary Islands, 

 1844, 81. 



on the tape-worm as prevalent in 



Abyssinia, 1844, 85. 



on the proposed ship-canal through 



the Isthmus of Suez, 1857, 199. 



HoDGKiNSON (Prof. E.) on the strength and 

 best forms of iron beams, 1831-32, 610. 



on the efiect of impact on beams, 



1833, 421. 



•^ — on the strength of cast iron, 1833, 423. 



