546 



INDEX. 



Doncaster new churches, 40. 

 D'Orsey, Rev. A. J., on the English 



Language, 307. 

 Druitt, R., on Houses in relation to 



Health, 133. 

 Du Chaillu, F., delivers a Narrative of 



his Tiavels in Westera Central Africa 



{no abstract), 335. 

 Durham, A , on Sleeping and Dreaming 



(mo abstract), 430. 



Earth's Temperature, &c., 139. 

 Eclipse, on Photographs of, by W. De 



la Rue, 362. 

 Electric Quantity and Intensity, 337. 



— Discharge, Action of Magnetic Force 

 on it, 169. 



— Light employed in Lighthouses, 221. 



— Silk-loom, 271. 



Electricity, Military Applications of, 



249; Atmospheric, 277. 

 Emmett, Gen. A., presents Military 



Books, 275. 

 English Language, Rev. A. D'Orsey on, 



307. 

 English Poetry with reference to Music, 



317. 

 Etna, Structure of, 129. 

 Exhibition of 1862, Mr. Monckton 



Milnes's Discourse on, 485. 

 Explosions, Causes of, &c., 438. 



Fairbairn, W , on Iron and its Resist- 

 ance to Projectiles, 491. 



Faraday, M., on Schonbein's Ozone and 

 Antozone, 70. 



— on Phosphorescence, Fluorescence, 

 &c., 159. 



— on Lighthouse Illumination — the 

 Electric Light, 220. 



— on Electric Silk-Loom, 271. 



— on Platinum, 321. 



— on De la Rue's Photographic Eclipse 

 Results, 362. 



— on Gas-Furnaces, 536. 

 Fergusson, J., on the Site of the Holy 



Sepulchre at Jerusalem, 426. 



Field, F., on the Minerals of the Andes, 

 190. 



Fitz-Roy, R., on Meteorological Tele- 

 graphy, 444. 



Fluorescence, 160. 



Force, J. Tyndall on, 527. 



— Conservation of, 347. 



— Magnetic, 98, 169. 



Frankland, E., on Combustion in Rare- 

 fied Air, 331. 



Fraunhofer's Lines, 326. 



French Government presents " Docu- 

 ments In^dits sur I'Histoire de 

 France," 241, 290. 



Fullerian Professor of Physiology — 

 John Marshall elected, 526. 



Gas-fuel, 537. 



Gases, Transmission of Heat througli, 

 155, 295. 



Gas-furnaces, Professor Faraday on, 536. 



Gassiot, J. P., Experiments on Vacua, 7 ; 

 Experiments with his Vacuum-tubes, 

 &c., 172. 



Geological Succession in Time, 109. 



Glaciers, J. Tyndall on, 72, 269; W. 

 Hopkins on the Motion of Glaciers, 

 411. 



Gladstone, J. H., on Shooting Stars and 

 Meteors, 143. 



Glass-furnaces, 538. 



Gorilla, Professor Owen on, 1 0. 



Gothic Architecture, E. B. Denison on, 

 32. 



Glen-Roy, Parallel Roads of, 341. 



Graham,T., Researches on Dialysis, 422. 



Grailich's Researches in Crystallo- 

 graphy, 98. 



Grant, Capt. J., his Cooking Apparatus, 

 251. 



Gratiolet's Researches on the Brain, 408. 



Grove, W. R., on the Electrical Dis- 

 charge and its Stratified Appearance 

 in Rarefied Media, 5. 



Halicarnassus, Discoveries at, 385. 



Health connected with Houses, 133. 



Heat in relation to Crystallography, 

 99 ; its Transmission through Gases, 

 155, 295 ; of the Sun, Theory respect- 

 ing, 531. 



Heliograph described, 363. 



Helmholtz, H., on the Law of the Con- 

 servation of Force applied to Organic 

 Nature, 347. 



Hill, M. D., on the Post-office, 457. 



— Rowland, his Penny Postal System, 

 461. 



Hofmann, A. W., on Mauve and Ma- 

 genta, 468. 



Holland, Sir H., Letter and Donations 

 from, 107, 382, 526. 



Holmes's Electric Light Apparatus, 222. 



Holy Sepulchre atJerusalera, Site of, 426. 



Hopkins, W., on the Earth's Internal 

 Temperature, &c., 139. 



— on the Motion of Glaciers, 410. 

 Horizontal Shell-Firing, 504. 

 Houses in relation to Health, 133. 

 Huxley, T. H., on Persistent Types of 



Animal Life, 151. 



— on Species and Races, 195. 



— on the Earliest Stages in the De- 

 velopment of Animals, 315. 



— on Fossil Remains of Man, 420. 



