6 



GENERAL INDEX TO THE ELEVEN VOLUMES OF 



Animals, on the unity of organization in, 

 vii. 379. 



-: , marsupial, of Australia, xi. 59. 



Ant, black, hybernation of the, i. 314. 



Ant-bear, or Myrmecophaga jubata, ac- 

 count of the, xi. 132. 



Anticlinal line of the London and Hamp- 

 shire basins, on the, v. 111. 



Antimonial wine and tartar emetic, ef- 

 fects of light on, v. 309. 



Antimony, muriate of, viii. 408. 



Apatite, composition of, ii. 311. 



Apjohn (Dr.) on a combination of bi- 

 cyanide of mercury and iodide of po- 

 tassium, ix. 401. 



Arabic names of stars, on the, viii. 368. 



Arago (M.), memoir on the influence of 

 the polar lights on the magnetic nee- 

 dle, Prof. Hansteen's observations on, 

 ii. 334. 



on the elastic power of steam, vii. 



235. 



Architecture, naval, Mr. Harvey's re- 

 searches in, x. 316. 



Armadillo, ix. 457. 



nine-banded, xi. 65. 



weasel-headed, xi. 137. 



Armagh observatory, vii. 225. 



Arrangement, artificial and natural, of 

 plants, vii. 15, 97, 180. 



Arseniate of cobalt, iv. 75. 



Arseniate of iron, analysis of, vi. 314. 



Arsenic acid, combination of with sugar, 

 v. 232. 



Arsenic in sea salt, viii. 387. 



, poisoning by, detection of, viii. 



277. 



, chloride of, i. 470. 



and cadmium, ii. 231. 



Arseniuret of aluminum, iv. 151. 



of copper, Mr. W. Phillips and 



Mr. Faraday on, ii. 286. 



Arseniurets of hydrogen, viii. 302. 



Artificial and natural arrangement of 

 plants, vii. 15, 97, 180. 



Ash timber of Earls Barton, Mr. Be van 

 on, v. 51. 



Aspartic acid and aspartates, vi. 236. 



Assam, rivers of, i. 151. 



Astronomical Ephemeris, new, iv. 141, 

 248. 



Astronomical observations, Lieut. Beau- 

 foy's, i. 46, 219, 290. 



Astronomy, i. 19, 28, 46, 47, 55, 69, 

 81, 140, 212, 219, 290, 291, 310, 

 315, 324, 390, 455; ii. 76, 81, 142, 

 140, 222, 401 ; iii. 26, 64, 136, 227, 



377, 451 ; iv. 62, 73, 76, 134, 136, 



141, 156, 173, 236, 248, 298, 337, 



390, 392, 409; v. 28, 91, 227, 274, 



465. 

 (In the volumes subsequent to v. the 

 astronomical subjects are specifi- 

 cally referred to, as follows :) 



Arabic names of stars, viii. 368. 



Astronomical causes, influence of, on 

 geological phaenomena, ix. 136. 



Astronomy, Bessel's tables for calcu- 

 lating the places of the fixed stars, 

 vi. 267. 



Azimuths and latitudes of two sta- 

 tions, on deducing the longitude 

 from, v. 24, 106. 



Berlin Astronomical Ephemeris vii. 

 172; ix. 81. 



Ceres, elements of, vii. 271. 



Comets, ix. 154. 



, in Pegasus, vii, 446 ; viii. 50 ; 



seen near the pole, ix. 220. 



Greenwich observatory, visitation of, 

 ix. 27. 



Guinand's glass for telescopes, vii. 

 351. 



Hour-lines of the ancients, ix. 133. 



Laplace, historical 61oge of, vi. 370. 



Limits on the earth's surface to a vi- 

 sible occultation, ix. 90. 



Lunar distances, formulae for clearing, 

 ix. 168. 



Lunar occultations, ix. 156, 318, 397, 

 464. 



of Aldebaran, vi. 66^ 



223, 459 ; vii. 223 ; viii. 234, 465. 

 of stars, Bessel on 



the calculations for predicting, vi. 

 336, 410. 



of stars observed at 



Dorpat, ix. 362. 



of planets and fixed 



stars In May and June 1830, vii. 

 390 ; October 1830, viii. 316 ; No- 

 vember and December, 394. 



Lunar theory, ix. 210. 



Moon's right ascension, ix. 241. 



Latitude of the Calton Hill Obser- 

 vatory, vii. 224. 



Longitude of the Armagh Observa- 

 tory, vii. 225. 



Longitude and latitude, conversion of 

 right ascension and declination 

 into, vii. 330. 



Mercury, observations of, viii. 235. 



Meridian, reduction to, ix. 270. 



Nautical Almanac, New, ix. 23. 



