INDEX TO VOL. III. 



Abel, F. A., on Science applied to Mili- 

 tary Purposes, 243. 



— on Explosions and their Military 

 Applications, 438. 



Acids and Salts, 234. 



Air, Estimation of Organic Matter in, 89. 



Albert, Prince Consort, Present from, 

 163 ; Address respecting his Decease, 

 404, 418. 



Alison, S. S., on certain Auditory Phe- 

 nomena, 63. 



Allen, Ralph, improves Postal System, 

 459. 



Andes, Minerals of, 190. 



Aniline, History of, 475. 



Animal Life, Persistent Types of, 151. 



— in the Deep Sea, 299. 



Animals, Earliest Stages of their De- 

 velopment, 315. 



Annual Meeting in 1859, 132 ; in 1860, 

 252 ; in 1861, 361 ; in 1862, 484. 



Antozone, 70. 



Apes, various, described, 16. See Man. 



Armstrong Gun, its Construction, 246 ; 

 its Powers, 500. 



Armstrong's Time-fuzes, 443. 



Atlantis, on the Theory of an, 431. 



Atmospheric Electricity, 277. 



Auditory Phenomena, S. S. Alison on, 63. 



Aurora Borealis, 9. 



Barlow, Rev. J., Secretaiy R.I., his 

 Portrait painted and presented by H. 

 W. Pickersgill, 1 ; resigns the Secre- 

 taryship, 291 ; Resolution of General 

 Meeting thereon, 313 ; Letter from, 

 329. 



Bazley, T., Plea for Cotton, 514. 



Becquerel, E.,on Phosphorescence, 160. 



Bell, Jacob, presents Gould's Works on 

 Birds, 154. 



Benzol discovered by Faraday, 482 ; its 

 relation to Mauve, 477. 



Blakeley's Gun, 246. 



Bonelli's Electric Silk- Loom, 272. 



Brain of Man and Apes, 407. 



Bread-making, 253. 



Brixham Hill Cavern, 149. 



Brodie, B. C, on Ozone, 71. 



Bunsen and KirchhofTs Spectrum Obser- 

 vations, 323, 396. 



Burdett-Coutts's Geological Scholarship, 

 264. 

 Vol. III. (No. 36.) 



C-ESICM, 325. 



Calcium, 83. 



Calico-Printing, its Processes and Im- 

 provements, 201. 



Calvert, F. C'., on the Influence of Science 

 on Calico-Printing, 201. 



Cannon, Construction of, 244. 



Carpenter, W. B., on the Relation of 

 the Vital to the Physical Forces, 206. 



Cerebral System of Classification, 174. 



Chameleon, Mineral, 89. 



Chemical Action of Solar Rays, 210. 



Chinese Lists of Meteors, 143. 



— Library presented, 219. 

 Chorley, H. F., on English Poetry with 



reference to Music, 317. 



Chronometry of Life, 117. 



Clark, Latimer, on Electrical Quantity 

 and Intensity, 337. 



Coal, Warington Smyth on, 510. 



Coal-tar Colours, History of, 468 ; Spe- 

 cimens of, 483. 



Cobbold, T., Lectures on Natural His- 

 tory Sciences {no abstract), 243. 



Coles's Shield- vessel, 509. 



Colloids, 424. 



Colours, on the Three Primary, 370. 



Combustion in Rarefied Air, 331. 



Conservation of Force and Organic Na- 

 ture, 347. 



Cotton, T. Bazley 's Plea for, 514. 



Coulvier-Gravier on Meteors, 145, 146. 



Crystal Molecule, N. S. Maikelyne on, 

 95. 



Crystallographic Models, 86, 88. 



Crystalloids, 424. 



Cuneiform Inscriptions, Sir H. C. Raw- 

 linson on (no abstract), 536. 



Darwin's Origin of Species considered, 



195, 226. 

 Deep-sea Bed, its Nature, 299. 

 De la Rue, Warren, Photographic 



Eclipse Results, 362. 



— presents Electric Lamp, &c. 418, 540. 

 Denison, E. B., on Modem Gothic Ar- 

 chitecture, 32. 



Development of Animals, 315. 

 Devonshire Caverns and Fossil Mam- 

 malia, 149, 150. 

 Dialysis, Graham's, 422. 

 Diamonds, Nature of, 229. 

 Difiusion, Chemical, 423. 



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