200 



SECTIONS. INDEX OF AUTHORS. 



Wilson (Dr. G.) on the artificial preparation 

 of sea- water for marine vivaria, 1854, 77. 



on the processes for the detection of 



fluorine, 1857, 61. 



on the employment of the living elec- 

 tric fishes as medical shock-machines, 

 1857, 115. 



, notice of Mr. Napier's process of etch- 

 ing glass in relief by hydrofluoric acid, 

 1859, 88. 



on some of the stages which led to the 



invention of the modern air-pump, 1859, 

 89. 



on the employment of the electrical 



eel, Gymnotus electricus, as a medical 

 shock -machine, by the natives of Surinam, 

 1859, 158. 



on the statistics of colour-blindness, 



1859, 228. 



Wilson (G. F.) on a process for obtaining 

 and purifying glycerine, and on some of 

 its applications, 1855, 75. 



Wilson (G. S.) on an Australian expedi- 

 tion, 1854, 125. 



Wilson (J.) on the coleopterous insects of 

 Sutherland, 1834, 615. 



on the salmon fry, 1840, 133. 



on some Persian insects, 1840, 136. 



Wilson (J. M.) on statistics of crime in 

 Ireland, 1857, 171. 



Wilson (J. S.) on the physical geography 

 of N.W. Australia, 1858, 155. 



on the general and gradual desiccation 



of the earth and atmosphere, 1858, 155. 



Wilson (T.), account of the Darton Col- 

 lieries' Ckib, 1838, 173. 



WiTiiAM (H.) on fossil plants, 1831-32, 

 78. 



on fossil vegetation, 1831-32, 583. 



With AM (H. T, M.) on rolled stones found 

 in the coal seam of Cockfield Fell Colliery, 

 1838, 79. 



Wollaston's (Dr.) argument respecting the 

 infinite divisibility of matter. Rev. W. 

 Whewell's remarks on, 1839, 26. 



WoLLEY (J.) on the birds of the Faroe is- 

 lands, 1850, 127. 



on a fresh form of crystallization in 



the particles of fallen snow under intense 

 cold, 1858, 40. 



* on the arrangement of small stones 



on certain bare levels in northern loca- 

 lities, 1858, 224. 



Wood (Mr.) on Kosman's patent cistern as 

 a sanitaiy machine, 1849, 1 34. 



*WooD (Dr.) on the economical uses of 

 certain lichens growing in abundance 

 about Cork, 1843, 79. 



Wood (Dr. A.) on the laws regulating the 

 development of monstrosities, 1850, 138. 



Wood (E.) on the genus Woodocrinus, 

 1857,76. 



*WooD (E. A.) on a mode of suspending, 

 disconnecting, and hoisting boats attached 

 to sailing ships and steamers at sea, 1859, 

 .245. 



Wood (N.) on the red sandstone of the 

 Tweed and Carlisle, 1838, 78. 



Wood (Searles V.) on the discovery of an 

 alligator in the freshwater cliif at Hord- 

 well, with extinct mammalia, 1844, 50. 



* on some tubular cavities in the coral- 

 line crag at Sudbourne and Gedgrave in 

 Suffolk, 1851, 70. 



on the probable maximum depth of 



the ocean, 1855, 99. 



*Wood (Dr. T.) on the combination of 

 metals with oxygen, 1852, 40. 



*WooDALL (Capt.) on barometrical and 

 thermometrical observations at Scar- 

 borough, 1856, 49. 



on the evidence of a reef of lower lias 



rock, extending from Robin Hood's Bay 

 to the neighbourhood of Flamborough 

 Head, 1856, 80. 



* on the intermittent springs of the 



chalk and oolite of the neighbourhood of 

 Scarborough, 1860, 108. 



*WooDHOusE (J.) on the mould for casting 

 conical bullets, 1852, 132. 



Woods (Dr. T.) on the electrolysotype, a 

 new photographic process, 1844, 36. 



on chemical combination ; and on the 



amount of heat produced by the combina- 

 tion of several metals with oxygen, 1852, 



39- 



on the time required by compounds 



for decomposition, 1857, 61. 



WooLLCOMBE (H.) ou the statistics of Ply- 

 mouth, Stonehouse, and Devonport, 1841, 

 82. 



on the statistics of Plymouth, 1842, 98. 



WooLLGAR (J. W.) on the financial eco- 

 nomy of savings' -banks, 1844, 92. 



WoRSLEY (P. J.) on a new process for 

 making and melting steel, 1856, 59. 



Wrede's (Von) explanation of the absorp- 

 tion of light, Prof Powell on, 1837, i6._ 



Wright (Dr. E. Percival), notes of a visit 

 to Mitchelstown caves, 1857, 108. 



on Tomopteris onisciformis, 1860, 



124. 



^Wright (H.) on the use of the gramme in 

 chemistry, 1856, 60. 



^Wright (T.) on the early ethnology of 

 Britain, 1854, 130. 



on some remains of an early people in 



the south-eastern corner of Yorkshire, 



1854, 130. 



^ on the ethnology of England at the 



extinction of the Roman government in 

 the island, 1855, 146. 



* on inscriptions in unknown characters 



on Roman pottery discovered in England, 



1855, 146. 



on the opening of a sepulchral tumu- 

 lus in East Yorkshire, 1858, 156. 



* on the excavations on the site of the 



Roman city of Uriconium at Wroxeter, 

 1860, 181. 



Wright (Dr. Thomas) on the occurrence of 

 the upper lias ammonites in the (so-called) 



