SECTIONS. INDEX OF AUTHORS. 



187 



the porcelain, earthenware, and glass 

 manufacture of Glasgow, 1856, 153. 



Strang (Dr. J.) on the money-rate of wages 

 of labour in Glasgow and the west of 

 Scotland, 1856, 155. 



on the rise, progress, and value of the 



embroidered muslin manufacture of Scot- 

 land and Ireland, 1857, 167. 



on the advantages arising from -the 



improvement of tidal rivers as exempli- 

 fied by the state of the Clyde, 1857, 167. 



on the water-supply to great towns, 



its extent, cost, uses, and abuses, 1858, 

 198. 



on the sewing-machine in Glasgow, 



and its effects on production, prices, and 

 wages, 1858, 198. 



on church-building in Glasgow, 1859, 



223. 



Strangways (Hon. F.) on the natural pe- 

 culiarities of the mountain called the 

 Louisenberg, in a letter to Sir R. I. Mur- 

 chison, 1846, 91, 



Strickland (A.) on a species of Procellaria 

 new to the British fauna, 1831-32, 598. 



on the Ardea alba, 1838, 106. 



* on a species of Scyllium taken on the 



Yorkshire coast, 1838, 107. 



■ on the British wild geese, 1858, 131. 



Strickland (Prof. H. E.) on the nature and 

 origin of transported gravel in England, 

 1837, 61. 



, queries respecting the gravel near 



Birmingham, 1839, 71. 



on the true method of discovering the 



natural system in zoology and botany, 

 1840, 128. 



on the genus Cardinia, Agassiz, as cha- 

 racteristic of the lias formation, 1841, 65. 



, notice of a map of Santorin, 1841, 68. 



on Halcyon smymensis, 1842, 70. 



on a chart of the natural affinities of 



the Insessorial order of birds, 1843, 69. 



on the structure and affinities of 



TJpupa, Linn., and Irrisor, Lesson, 1843, 



, notice of the Prince of Canino's work, 



' Fauna Italica,' 1843, 70. 



, notice of Capt. Drummond's cata- 

 logues of birds of Corfu, the Ionian 

 Islands, and of Crete, 1843, 70. 



* on an anomalous structure in the 



paddle of an Ichthyosaurus, 1844, 51. 



on the footprints of animals on the 



new red sandstone of Corncockle Muir, 

 1845, 51. 



on results of researches into the fossil 



insects of the Secondary formations of 



Britain, 1845, 58. 

 on the history of the Dodo and other 



allied species of birds, 1847, 79. 

 * on anastatic jDrinting and its various 



combinations, 1848, 120. 



on vegetable remains in the Keuper 



sandstone of Longdon, Worcestershire, 

 1849, 66. 



Strickland (Prof. H. E.) on two additional 

 bones of the long-legged Dodo, or Soli- 

 taire, brought from Mauritius, 1849, 81. 



' on a peculiar structure in the sub- 

 medial pair of rectrices of Vidua para- 

 disea, 1850, 126. 



on pseudomorphous crystals in new 



red sandstone, 1853, 61. 



on the Partridges of the great water- 

 shed of India, 1853, 71. 



on the mode of growth of Halichon- 



dria suberea, 1853, 72. 



*Struthers (Dr. J.) on the use of the round 

 ligament of the head of the femur, 1855, 



^35- 

 on the use of the round ligament of 



the hip-joint, 1855, 136. 

 on the explanation of the crossed in- 

 fluence of the brain, 1855, 136. 

 Struve (Prof.) on the importance of accu- 

 .rately connecting the observatories of 



Russia and of Greenwich, 1847, 46. 

 Struve (W. P.) on the great anticlinal line 



of the mineral basin of South Wales, 



1848, 75. 

 on the ventilation of collieries, with 



description of a new mine-ventilator, 



1848, 120. 



on a new low-pressure atmospheric 



railway, 1848, 120. 



Stuart (J.) on the sculptured stones of 



Scotland, 1859, 197. 

 Stuart (W.) on the Plymouth breakwater, 



1841, 99. 

 Sturgeon (W.) on electro-magnetism, 1831- 



32, 569. 



on a peculiar class of voltaic pheno- 

 mena, 1840, 86. 



Sturm (Prof.) on a method of manufacturing 

 cylindrical lenses, 1854, 47. 



Sturt (Capt. C.) on an Australian expedi- 

 tion, 1854, 125. 



on discoveries in Australia, 1856, 119. 



Stutchbury (S.) on an additional species of 

 saiu-ian found near Bristol, 1836, 90. 



on a large cylindrical bone found in 



the "bone-bed" of Aust Cliff, on the 

 Severn, 1849, 67. 



Sullivan (Mr.) on the tribes of Indians in- 

 habiting the country explored by the 

 British North- American expedition, 1860, 



173- 



Sullivan (Prof. W. K.) on a process for the 

 determination of the nitrates in plants, 

 1857, 58. 



on the presence of several acids of the 



series C^ H" O^ among the products of 

 the distillation of peat, 1857, 58. 



on the solubility of salts at high tem- 

 peratures, and on the action of saline 

 solutions on silicates under the influence 

 of heat and pressure, 1857, 59. 



* on the influence which physical cha- 

 racteristics exert upon the language and 

 mythology of a people, as a means of 

 tracing the affinities of races, 1857, 153. 



