122 



SECTIONS. INDEX OF AUTHORS. 



heating effect of the sun's rays, 1833, 

 4.18. 

 CuMMiNG (Rer. J. Gt.) on posidonian schist 

 amidst trappean beds, and on traces of 

 drift-ice in the south of the Isle of Man, 

 1845, 60. 



on some of the more recent changes 



in the area of the Irish Sea, 1854, 80. 



Cunningham (Jas.) on a method of con- 

 structing magnets, 1837, 38. 



Cunningham (Jno.) on the submarine forest, 

 Leasowe, 1854, 81. 



on ventilation of ships, 1854, 148. 



CuNNiNGTON (W.) On a peculiarity in the 



structure of one of the fossil sponges of 



the chalk, Choanites Konigi, 1848, 67. 

 Curtis (Mr.) on the Hylurgus piniperda, 



1836, 98. 

 Curtis (W. J.) on a flexible suspension 



bridge, 1837, 132. 

 * on methods to increase security upon 



railways, 1839, 132. 

 *CuRTis (Prof) on a system of geodetics 



and the conjugate system, &c., 1857, 2, 

 Cybulz (Capt.) on a set of relief models 



of the Alps, &c., 1860, 155. 



*Daa (Dr. L. K.) on the Varanger Fiord, 

 1856, 108. 



* on the Torenio system of the Ugrians 



(Finns), Albanians, and other popula- 

 tions, 1856, ic8. 



* on the relation of the Siberian and 



Armenian languages, 1856, 108. 



, table cf the Lapps and Finns in Nor- 

 way, according to the census returns, 



1856, 138. 



*D'Abbadie (A.), synopsis of seventy-two 

 languages of Abyssinia and the adjacent 

 countries, 1851, 88. 



- on the ethnological and physical cha- 

 racters of the negro variety of mankind, 



1857, 117. 



Dale (J.) on elliptic polarization, 1846, 5. 



on a proposed optical experiment, 



1847, 37. 



Dale (Rev. T. P.) on s:me optical proper- 

 ties of phosphorus, 1858, 1 5. 



on the relation between refractive in- 

 dex and volume among liquids, 1859, 

 12. 



Dalton (Dr.), experiments on the quantity 

 of food, compared with the quantity of 

 the different secretions, 1831-32, 73. 



on the effects of atmospheric pressure 



on the animal frame, 1831-32, 85. 



, analysis of pyroxylic spirit, 1835, 



44. 



on chemical symbols, 1836, 77. 



on the non-prcduction of carbonic 



acid by plants, 1837, 58. 



* on microcosmic salt, 1842, 40. 



* on a new and easy method of ana- 

 lysing sugar, 1842, 40. 



* on the phosphates and arseniates, 



1842, 40. 



Dalyell (Sir J. G.) on the propagation of 

 certain Scottish zoophytes, 1834, 598. 



on the regeneration of lost organs dis- 

 charging the functions of the head and 

 viscera, by the Holothuria and Amphi- 

 trite, 1840, 139. 



on exuviation, or the change of the 



integuments of animals in the Crustacean 

 tribes, 1850, 120. 



*Dalyell (Consul), earthquake at Erzerum, 



1859, 266. 

 *Dalzell (Dr.) on crystallized bichromate 



of strontia, 1859, 68. 



on the economical preparation of pure 



chromic acid, 1859, 68. 



Dalziel (Dr. J.) on sleep, and an apparatus 

 for promoting artificial respiration, 1838, 

 127. 



on hysteria, hydrophobia, and other 



convulsive affections, embracing an ana- 

 lysis of the phenomena of water-dread, 

 1850, 129. 



DALziELL(Mr.), notice of a method of pump- 

 ing water from leaky vessels at sea, 1838, 

 163. 



Dana (Dr. S. L.) on determining the quan- 

 tity of real indigo in the indigos of com- 

 merce, 1841, 49. 



Daniell (Prof.) on the natives of Old Ca- 

 labar, Africa, 1845, 79. 



Danson (J. T.) on the fluctuations of the 

 annual supply and average price of corn, 

 in France, during the last seventy years, 

 1849, 87. 



on the progress of emigration from the 



United Kingdom, 1849, 88. 



■■ on the current price and the cost price 

 of corn in England during ten years 

 (1843-1854), as illustrating the value of 

 agricultural statistics, 1854, 134. 



on the diversity of measures in the 



corn-markets of the United Kingdom, 

 1856, 137. 



— — — on the connexion between slavery in 

 the United States of America and the 

 cotton manufactiu-e of the United King- 

 dom, 1856, 137- 



on the Wirral peninsula, and the 



growth of its population in connexion 

 with Liverpool and the Manchester dis- 

 trict, 1856, 143. 



on the ages of the population in Li- 

 verpool and Manchester, 1857, 158. 



Danson (W.) on the introduction of a spe- 

 cies of Auchenia into Britain for obtain- 

 ing wool, 1839, 92. 



on the Alpaca, 1840, 131. 



Darling (W.) on the probable maximum 

 depth of the ocean, 1855, 8 1. 



Daubeny (Dr.) on the connexion of hot 

 springs with volcanos, 1831-32, 83. 



* on an instrument to illustrate) the ef- 

 fects of capillary attraction, 1831-32, 85. 



on the geological inferences to be de- 

 duced from the chemical constitution of 

 springs and of sea- water, 1831-32, 592. 



