TO VOLS. I. TO XII. 



603 



Owen, R., National Museum of Natural 

 History (no Abstract), iii. 360. 



elected Fullerian Professor of 



Physiology, ii. 561. 



Oxygen, its Magnetic Character, i. 1 ; 

 Boussinganlt's Mode of preparing, 

 337; Liquefied, xi. 148; Solidified, 

 XI. 550 ; Oxygen and Ozone, Optical 

 Properties, xii. 468. 



Oxyhydrogen Flame, Heat of, v. 391. 



Oysters and the Oyster Question, x. 

 336. 



Ozone, I. 94 ; vi. 546 ; xii. 468, 557 ; 

 and Antozone, iii. 70. 



Pacific Ocean, Native Races, tiii. 



612. 

 Packe, E., Donation, iv. 347. 

 Paddles from New Ireland, vii. 516. 

 Paget, J., Chronometry of Life, iii. 



117. 

 Painting affected by Faults of Vision, 



VI. 450. 

 Palgrave, F. T., Good Taste in Art, v. 



376. 



W. G., Arabia, iv. 348. 



Palladium absorbs Hydrogen, vi. 50; 



its Alloy with Hydrogenium, 54. 

 Palmer, Capt., on Sinaitic Inscriptions, 



VI. 91. 

 John, improves Postal System, 



III. 459. 

 Papuans, viii. 642. 

 Paraflin, i. 6, 7 ; 135; Oil, &c. iv. 19, 



20. 

 Paraffins and their Alcohols, viii. 86. 

 Parallaxes of Stars, xi. 96. 

 Parallel Roads of Glen Roy, viii. 233. 



Roads of Lochaber, iii. 341. 



Parchment Paper, ii. 409. 



Paris, Comte de, Letter from, rt-spect- 



ing the Prince Consort, in. 430a. 



Donation, iv. 156. 



Parnell, J., Donation, iv. 516. 

 Pasteur on Dust, vi. 2 ; on Spontaneous 



Generation, 10 ; on Science, ix. 23 ; 



Researches, xi. 161 ; xii^ 571. 

 Paterno Volcanic Eruption, iv. 629, 



640. 

 Pauer, E., Works of Composers for the 



Pianoforte, xi. 171. 

 Peat and its Products, i. 4. 

 Peaucellier's Discovery of the Mechani- 

 cal Conversion of Motion, vii. 179. 

 Pectous State of Bodies, in. 425. 

 Pendulum Experiments, i. 70 ; at Har- 



ton Colliery, ii. 17. 

 Pengelly, W., Ossiferous Caverns of 



Devonshire, iii. 149. 



Vol. XI[. (No. 83.) 



Pengelly, W., Devonian Fossils and the 

 Burdett-Coutts Geological Scholar- 

 ships, &c. III. 263. 



Kent's Cavern, Torquay, iv. 534. 



St. Michael's Mount, Cornwall, v. 



128. 



Penny Post established, ni. 458, 461. 



Penrose, F., Relations of Science to 

 Architecture, i. 124. 



Application of the Mechanical 



Conversion of Motion, vii. 182. 



Peptous State of Bodies, iii. 425. 



Pepys, J., Donations, i. 54, 455; Por- 

 trait presented, v. 24. 



Percy, J., Modes of extracting Gold 

 from its Ores, i. 205. 



Smelting of Iron and Manufacture 



of Steel (no Ahstract), iv. 244. 



Perkin, W. H., Colouring Matters, v. 

 566. 



Discovery of Mauve Colour, in. 



478; IV. 438. 



Permian Epoch, Climate of, n. 417. 



Perpetual Motion, ii. 152. 



Perry, J., on Japanese Mirrors, ix. 29, 



Rev. S. J., Transit of Venus, viii. 



79. 



Solar Surface during the last ten 



^ years, xii. 498. 



Personal Identification and Descrip- 

 tion, XII. 346. 



Petitjean's Silvering Process, ii. 308. 



Petroleum, Manufactures from, ii. 506 ; 

 relation to Mud Volcanoes, iv. 63^. 



Spirit, &c., imponed, vii. 402 ; 



Explosions, vii. 403 ; xi. 222 ; Storage 

 and Conveyance, vii. 406 ; employed 

 as an Illuminant, xi. 234. 



Pettigrew, J. B., Flight in relation to 



Aeronautics, v. 94. 

 Phillips, J., Geological Sketches round 



Ingleborough, i. 278. 



Malvern Hills, ii. 385. 



Philosophy before Socrates, vi. 302. 

 Phlogiston Theory revived, vi. 315. 

 Phonograph, viii. 507; presented, ix. 37. 

 Phosphorescence, in. 159 ; ix. 143, 431 ; 



x. 208. 



and Ozone, xii. 557. 



Phosphoric Acid, vi. 20. 

 Phosphoroscope. in. 161. 

 Phosphorus, Allotropic IModifications 



of, I. 135, 203. 

 Photogalvanography, n. 343. 

 Photographic Eclipse Results, in. 362 ; 



VI. 485. 



Spectra of Stars, ix. 285. 



Transparency of Bodies, iv. 43. 



Processes, vii. 220. 



