SECTIONS. -=-rNDEX OF AUTHORS. 



167 



'Oppbrt (Dr. J.), geographical and histo- 

 rical results of the French scientific ex- 

 pedition to Babylon, 1855, 148. 



Oram (Mr.) on cementing small coal and 

 coal-dust for fuel, 1838, 85. 



on the economy of fuel, 1839, 69. 



Orlebar (A. B.) on the magnetic and me- 

 teorologic observatory at Bombay, 1847, 

 28. 



Ormerod (G^. W.) on the extent of the 

 Northwich salt-field, 1846, 62. 



on the drainage of a portion of Chat 



Moss, 1848, 72. 



on the gradual subsidence of a portion 



of the surface of Chat Moss in Lancashire, 

 by drainage, 1850, 10 1. 



*Osborn (Mr.), notice of the new volcanic 

 island, 1831-32, 85. 



OsBORN (H.) on the presence of atmo- 

 spheric air, uncombined chlorine, and 

 carbonic acid in the water of wells in the 

 suburbs of Southampton, and their action 

 on lead, 1846, 42. 



*OsBORN (Capt. S.) on the Arctic expedi- 

 tions, 1855, 149. 



* on the Sea of Azof, and the Sivash or 



Putrid Sea, 1857, 148. 



■ on the Yang-tse-kiang, and its future 



commerce, 1859, 196, 



* on the formation of oceanic ice in the 



Arctic regions, 1860, 170. 



Osborne (Dr.) on the efiects of cold on the 

 human body, and on a mode of measuring 

 refrigeration, 1835, 94. 



* on the statistics of lunacy, with 



special relation to the asylum in Cork, 

 1843, 96. 



Osler (A. F.) on a new registering anemo- 

 meter and rain-gauge, 1837, 33. 



■ , account of some indications of the 



anemometers at Plymouth and Birming- 

 ham, 1839, 17. 



-- — on the application of the principle of 

 the vernier to the subdividing of time, 

 1842, 9. 



■■ on the results of certain anemometers, 

 1849,25. 



< , registers from his new integrating 



anemometer, 1850, 46. 



— — on his anemometer and rain-gauge at 

 the Liverpool observatory, 1854, 34. 



on a portable self-registering anemo- 

 meter for recording the direction and 

 amount of horizontal motion of the air, 

 1858, 38. 



Oswald (F.) on the occurrence of Silurian 

 rocks at Ober and Neu SchmoUen, near 

 Breslau, in Silesia, 1845, 47. 



*OuTRAM (Sir B. F.) on Hartlepool pier 

 and port as a harbour of refuge, 1865, 

 149. 



Overweg's (Dr.) discovery of Devonian 

 rocks in North Africa, Prof. E. Forbes on, 

 1851, 58. 



Owen (Dr. D. D.), notice of his memoir on 

 the geology of the Western States of North 



America, by Sir E. I. Murchison, 1842, 



44. 

 Owen (J.) on the neglect of naval archi- 

 tecture in Great Britain, 1831-32, 608. 



on naval architecture, 1833, 430. 



Owen (Prof.) on the production of cataract 



by a worm, 1837, 98. 



on Marsupiata, 1838, 105. 



on the structure of the teeth, and the 



resemblance of ivory to bone, 1838, 135. 

 , letter respecting Mr. Nasmyth's paper 



on the structure of the teeth, 1841, 4. 

 — — on a Thylacinus, the great dog-headed 



opossum, 1841, 70. 

 * on Dr. Martin Barry's researches on 



fibre, 1842, 83. 

 on Argon auta Argo, 1844, 74. 



on a human skull from South Aus- 

 tralia, used for holding and carrying 

 water, 1844, 77. 



on some fossil mammalia of South 



America, 1846, 65. 



on the OS humero-capsulare of the Or- 



nithorhynchus, 1848, 79. 



on the communications between the 



tympanum and palate in the crocodiles, 

 1848, 79. 



on the homologies and notation of the 



dental system in mammalia, 1848, 91. 



on the value of the origins of nerves 



as a homological character, 1848, 93. 



on Lucernaria inauriculata, 1849, 78. 



on new fossil mammalia from the 



eocene freshwater formation at Hordwell, 

 Hants, 1851, 67. 



* on the fossil mammalia of the red 



crag, 1851, 67. 



* on the homologies of the cranial 



vertebrae, 1862, 78. 



on the anthropoid apes, 1854, 111. 



* on the anatomy of the great ant-eater, 



1854, 113. 



, description of the remains of Ich- 

 thyosaurus found at Exmouth Island by 

 the Arctic Searching Expedition, 1855, 



79- 



on the Ajuh of Dr. Yogel, from the 



river Benue, Central Africa, 1856, 99. 



on a new genus (Dimorphodon) of 



Pterodactyle, with remarks on the geolo- 

 gical distribution of flying reptiles, 1868, 



97- . ^ ... 

 on remains of new and gigantic species 



of Pterodactyle (Pter. Fittoni and Pter. 



Sedgwickii) from the upper greensand 



near Cambridge, 1858, 98. 

 , letter to Mr. E. Chadwick on the 



physiological limits to mental labour, 



1860, 189. 



Page (D.) on the subdivisions of the palaeo- 

 zoic rocks of Scotland, 1854, 91. 



^ on the structtire and texture of strati- 

 fied rocks, 1854, 92. 



on the Pterygotus and Pterygotus beds 



of Great Britain, 1856, 89. 



