10 



GENERAL INDEX TO THE ELEVEN VOLUMES OF 



Botany, cultivation of, in England, vi. 

 351, 428. 



, Flora Devoni«nsis, viii. 375. 



, fossil plants which characterize 



the secondary and tertiary formations, 

 vi. 133. 



,Mr. Haworth's description ofller- 



mione Cypri, ix. 183. 



, Mr. Haworth's new account of 



Kalanchoe, vi. 301. 



, Mr. Haworth's account of new 



succulent plants, vii. 106. 



— — , Lathreea squamaria, vii. 46. 



, Mr. Haworth on the Narcissean 



group of plants, viii. 130. 



, the plant intended by the Sham- 

 rock of Ireland, vii. 289. 



, the vegetation of the first period 



of the world, vii. 23, 185. 



Botryogene, iv. 153. 



Boue (Dr. Ami) on the geology of 

 Austria and Bavaria, viii. 64. 



on the geology of Moravia and the 



West of Hungary, ix. 50. 



on the geology of Transylvania, 



ix. 134. 



Bowie (Mr.) on the botany of South 

 Africa, viii. 46. 



Bowman (J . E.) on Lathrcea squamaria, 

 vii. 46. 



Boyle's fuming-liquor, vi. 76. 



Braconnot (M.) on gallic and pyrogallic 

 acid, x. 154. 



Brain, the, vi. 54. 



— — , Dr. Foville's researches on the 

 anatomy of the, v. 278, 331. 



Brandes (Dr. R.) on the preparation of 

 conia, iv. 23. 



on a gelatinous substance found in 



a damp meadow, iii. 271. 



Brande's " Chemistry", error in, v. 

 419. 



Braunite, analysis of, iv. 99. 



Brayley (E. W. Jun.) on the origin of 

 certain brine-springs in North Ame- 

 rica, vi. 74. 



— — on the origin of the diamond, i. 

 147. 



on the meaning of certain Egyp- 

 tian hieroglyphics, v. 62, note. 



on the chemical theory of galvan- 

 ism, vii. 61. 



on a fossil vertebra referred to a 



species of Megatherium, ix. 416. 



, specimens of Murchisonite col- 

 lected by, i. 449. 



> on the agency of heat in the con- 



solidation of the saliferous new red 

 sandstone, vi. 71. 

 Brayley (E. VV. Jun.) on the odour ex- 

 haled by certain organic remains in the 



diluvium of the arctic circle, ix. 411. 

 on the collection and chemical ex- 

 amination of the matrices of organic 



remains, ix. 412, note. 

 on the elongation of the shoots of 



plants towards a vessel of water, xi. 



255, note. 

 on the existence of salts of potash 



in brine-springs and in rock-salt, v. 



411. 

 — — , review of the Dublin Journal of 



Medical and Chemical Science, No. I., 



xi. p. 442. 

 1 of Mantell's Illustrations of 



the Geology of Sussex, ii. 439. 

 , of Martin's Geological Me- 

 moir on a Part of Western Sussex, iv. 



38. 

 , of Osburn's account of an 



Egyptian Mummy, v. 57. 

 , of the Introductory matter 



prefixed to Prof. Rennie's edition of 



Montagu's Ornithological Dictionary, 



x. 370, 429. 

 , of Samouelle's Entomologi- 

 cal Cabinet, No. J II., xi. 445. 

 , of "Six Maps of the Stars," 



ix. 202. 

 on the connexion of rock-basins 



with a concretionary structure in the 



rocks on which they occur, viii. 331. 

 on the alleged artificial origin of 



rock-basins, viii. 331 ; ix. 101. 

 on the English equivalent of the 



saliferous rock of North America, vi. 



75 ; vii. 198. 

 on the experiment of sinking an 



empty bottle in the sea, v. 372, note. 

 on stalactites formed in arches and 



vaults, xi. 301. 

 Brewster (Sir D.) on double refraction 



produced by pressure, vii. 356. 

 on the origin of the diamond, i. 



148. 

 on the reflection and decomposition 



of light at refracting surfaces, v. 380. 

 on the crystallographical and opti- 

 cal characters of Oxahevrite, ii. 



153. 

 , award of the Royal Medal to, by 



the Royal Society, ix. 43. 

 Bridge, suspension, at Broughton, fall 



of, ix. 384. 



