TO VOLS. I. TO XII. 



591 



Faraday, M., Phosphorescence, Fluor- 

 escence, &c. III. 159. 



Lighthouse Illumination — the 



Electric Light, iii. 220. 



Electric Silk-Loom, iii. 27L 



Platinum, in. 321. 



de la Rue's Photographic Eclipse 



Results, III. 3G2. 



Gas-Furnaces, iii. 536. 



his Letter to the Prince of Wales, 



IV. 3. 



Donations, iv. 153, 325, 483. 



a Bust of him presented, iv. 14 ; 



a Portrait, ix. 522. 



Decease announced, v. 193. 



his Legacy of MSS. and Books, 



V. 193 ; MS. Notes, &c. bequeathed 

 to the Institution, vi, 185 ; first 

 Electric Machine presented, ti. 

 185. 



Discoveries in Royal Institution, 



VII. 5, 10 ; IX. 4, 300, 334; Liquefac- 

 tion of Gases, viii. 657 ; Magneto- 

 Electric Light, IX. 4-6 ; Spark, 24. 



Faraday, Mrs., Books presented by, v. 

 194; Pension granted to, v. 276; 

 Decease, ix. 37. 



" Faraday as a discoverer," by J. Tyn- 

 dall (see Index in vol. v.) v. 199. 



" Faraday Memorial " Committee, Do- 

 nation, XII. 136. 



" Faraday " Steamship, vii. 310. 



' Farbenlehre,' ix. 340. 



Farmer, J., "Wind applied to String 

 Instruments, vii. 488. 



Wallace Electric Machine, ix. 15. 



Farrar, Archdeacon, Pubhc School 

 Education, v. 26, 273. 



Society in the 4th Century a.d., 



xii. 75. 



Fashion in Deformity, ix. 390. 



Faulhorn, Physiology of its Ascent, iv. 

 572. 



Fauna of the Sea-shore, xi. 168. 



Fawcett, H., Wealth (no Abstract), iv. 

 434. 



Fellows, Lady, bequeaths Drawings of 

 Watches, vii. 336. 



Fergusson, J., Holy Sepulchre and the 

 Temple at Jerusalem, in. 426 ; iv. 

 366 ; Tree and Serpent Worship, v. 

 453 



Ferns (fossil), x. 223. 



Feudal Property, viii. 126. 



Few, W. R., presents Photograph of 

 Orion, xn. 181. 



Fick, Dr., Source of Muscular Power, 

 IV. 654 ct scq. 



Fiction, Art of, xi. 70. 



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

 190. 



Magenta and its Derivative 



Colours, IV. 437. 

 Filhol's Observations, rx. 368. 

 Films, Liquid, xi. 143. 

 Fireballs, iv. 88. 

 Fireman's Respirator, vi. 374. 

 Fireplace Construction, xi. 338. 

 Firework Making, Accidents in, vii. 



417. 

 Fish-culture, iv. 75. 

 Fitz-Roy, R., Meteorological Tele- 

 graphy, in. 444. 

 Fixed Stars, their Constitution, iv. 



441 ; their distances, xi. 91. 

 Fizeau, M., on Phutograjjliic Engra- 

 ving, II. 346 ; Velocity of Light, vii. 

 472. 

 Flames, Luminous, v. 419 ; Sounding 

 and Sensitive, v. 6 ; vni. 539 ; xii. 

 188. 

 Fleming, S., Scheme for Universal 



Time, xi. 390. 

 Flight in relation to Aeronautics, v. 94. 

 Flinders Bar, vni. 592. 

 Flint and Quartz, Alcohols from, vii. 

 107. 



Implements of Abbeville, &c. iv. 



213. 

 Flour Mill Explosions, vii. 409 ; x. 89. 

 Flower, W. H., Palseonto logical Evi- 

 dence of Gradual Modification of 

 Animal Forms, vii. 94. 



Extinct Animals of N. America, 



viii. 103. 



Native Races of the Pacific Ocean. 



VIII. 602. 



Fashion in Deformity, ex. 390. 



Whales, x. 360. 



Wings of Birds, xi. 364. 



Pygmy Races of Men, xn. 266. 



Fluid Motion, vin. 272. 



Fluids and Solid Bletals, xi, 395. 



Fluorescence, in. 160 ; iv. 564 ; x. 208, 



210. 

 Fluorescent Screen, x. 245, 258. 

 Fogs, IV. 50 ; X. 25 ; Fog-signals, iv. 52 ; 

 viL 169; vni. 543; xn. 442; Fog- 

 bell, VI. 221 ; xn. 441. 

 Folk-Lore of the Russians, vi. 326. 

 Food of Man, i. 313 ; in relation to his 

 Work, IV. 431, 681-3. 



Preservation of, n. 72. 



Forbes, E., Natural History of the 

 British Seas, i. 17. 



Analogy between the Life of an 



Individual and the Duration of a 

 Species, i. 193. 



