INDEX. 



563 



Electricity. See Faraday^ Grove, 



Malone, T)/nd(tll. 

 Electric Telegraph, 394, 557. 



Faraday, Professor, on Magnetic Phi- 

 losophy, 6, 196. 



— on Gravity, 10. 



— on Electric Conduction, 123. 



— on Ruhmkorff's Induction Appara- 

 tus, 139. 



— on Petitjean's Silvering Process, 

 308. 



— - on Divided Gold, 310. 



— on the Conservation of Force, 352. 



— on the Relations of Gold to Light, 

 444. 



— on Static Induction, 470, 490. 



— on Wheatstone's Electric Tele- 

 graph, &c., and Scientific Educa- 

 tion, 556. 



Fizeau, M., Photographic Engraving, 



346. 

 Food, Preservation of, 72. 

 Forbes, Professor J. D., on his theory 



of Glaciei-s, 320, 545. 

 Force, Consei-vation of, 352. 

 Frankland, E., on the production of 



Organic bodies, 538. 

 FuUerian Professorship of Physiology: 



— T. H. Huxley elected, 147. 



— R. 0«ren elected, 561. 



Gatne, W., Parchment Paper, 409, 



411. 

 Gemmation, on, 534. 

 Geology. See A usten, Carpenter, Lyell, 



Phillips, Ramsay, Rogers, Sopwith. 

 Glaciers, 320, 545. 

 Gladstone, J. H., on Gunpowder, 99. 



— on Chromatic Phaenomena exhi- 

 bited by Transmitted Light, 336. 



Gold and Light, Relations of, 310, 444. 

 Grant, J., on Military Cookery, 422. 

 Grove, W. R., on Perpetual Motion, 

 152. 



— on Molecular Impressions of Light 

 and Electricity, 458. 



Gunpowder and its substitutes, 99. 



Hall, Sir B., present from, 315. 

 Hamilton, W. R., presents Lepeius* 



Egypt, 414. 

 Harton Colliery Experiments, 17. 

 Heat, Application of, to Cookery, 422. 

 Hofmann, A. W., on Ammonia, 274. 

 Huxley, T. H., on Development of 



Animal Life in Time, 82. 



— on Natural History, 187. 



— on our Knowledge of Nerve, 432. 



Huxley, T. H., on Gemmation, 534. 



— elected Fullerian Professor of 

 Physiology, 147. 



Hydro-carbons, on, 63. 



Ice, Physical Properties of, 454, 645. 



James, H., on Ordnance Survey, 516. 

 Jekyll, E., on Siege Operations, 42. 

 Jones, H. B., on Ventilation, 236. 

 Joule, Mr., Researches on Heat, 202. 



Kars, Siege of, 246. 



Kyhl, P.,. Nature-Printing, 110. 



Lacaita, J. P., on Dante, 118. 



— on Earthquakes in Southern Italy, 

 528. 



Lankester, Dr. E., on the Drinking 



Waters of the Metropolis, 466. 

 Lectures, Courses in 1855, 5, 56 ; in 



1856, 150,205; in 1857, 318,414; 



in 1858, 452, 488. 

 Leyden Battery, Currents of, 132. 

 Libi-ary Catalogue, New, 446. 

 Light, Chemical Action of, 223, 343 ; 



relations of Light and Gold, 310, 



444; Chromatic Phenomena from 



Transmitted Light, 336. 

 Lissajous' Acoustic Experiments, 441. 

 Locks, Improvements in, 475. 

 Lyell, Sir C, on Erratic Blocks, in 



Massachusetts, 86. 



— on the Temple of Serapis, 207. 



Magnetism, 6, 13, 159, 196, 352. 

 Malone, T. A., on Photogalvanography, 



343. 

 Malvern Hills, 386. 

 Massachusetts Erratic Blocks, 86. 

 Maurice, Rev. F. D., on Milton as a 



Schoolmaster, 328. 

 Mer-de-Glace, 545. 

 Meteorology of Torquay, 437. 

 Military Chemistry, 283; Cookeiy, 



422. 

 Mining Districts of North of England, 



57. 

 Milton as a Schoolmaster, 328. 

 More, H., on Man, 26, 41. 

 Motive Power, 152, 199. 

 Muller, H., Chemical Discoveries, 



506, 508. 



Natural History. See Huxley, Owen. 

 Nature-Printing, 106. 

 Nerve, our present Knowledge of, 432 

 New Zealand, Earthquake at, 213. 



