TO VOLS. I. TO XII. 



607 



EiTskin, J., Architecture of the Somme 



{no Abstract), v. 450. 



Verona and its Rivers, vi. 55. 



Eemaiks on Michael Augelo, ti. 



537 ; and on Philosophy of Art, 539. 

 Enssell, John Scott, Wave-line Ships 



and Yachts, i. 115. 



English Ships and American 



Clippers, i. 210. 



Iron Walls of England, iii. 503. 



Nature and Uses of Gun-Cotton, 



IV. 292. 

 Crystal Palace Fire, v. 18. 



Lord Arthur, Presents Ersch 



and Gruber's Encyclopedia, viii, 

 559. 



Russian Folk Lore and Songs, vi. 326. 



Secret Societies, viii. 405. 



Domestic Industry, x. 359. 



Rutherford, W., elected Fullerian Pro- 

 fessor of Physiology, vi. 544 ; re- 

 signed, VII. 3o9. 



Sabine, E., observations on Atmo- 

 spheric Magnetism, i. 238. 



Saccharine, xi. 462. 



Safety Lamps, Experiments, vii. 400 ; 

 in Collieries, xii. 204. 



St. Peter's, at Rome, aided by Science, 

 IV. 12. 



Sal Ammoniac, ix. 51. 



Salamon, A. Gordon, Yeast, xii. 571. 



Salic Law, ix. 541. 



Salmon, W., Botanicnl Works presented 

 by. III. 193 ; Donations, iv. 290 ; vii. 

 164. 



Salts and Acids, iii. 234. 



Samoans, viii. 646. 



Sand Blast and Sand Emsion, vii. 84. 



Sanderson, J. Burden, Dionsea Mus- 

 cipula, VII. 332. 



Excitability of Plants and Ani- 

 mals, X. 146, 151. 



Cholera: its Cause and Preven- 

 tion, XL 288. 



Some Electrical Fishes, xii. 139. 



Sandwith, H., Siege of Kars, ii. 246. 

 Santonine produces Colour Blindness, 



VI. 271. 

 Sap, Rise of, i. 197. 

 Savage, Miss A., presents her Father's 



Works on Printing in Colours, ii. 



333. 

 Savage Thought in Civilisation, v. 



522. 

 Savart's Researches, i. 447. 

 Savory, W. S., Relation of the Animal 



and Vegetable to the Inorganic 



Kingdom, iii. 368. 



Savory, W. S., Motion in Plants and 



Animals, iii. 433. 

 Dreaming and Somnambulism, 



IV. 207. 

 Scarlet Fever, Etiology of, xii. 150. 

 Scattering of Light, vi. 189, 

 Schafer, E. A., elected Fullerian Pro- 

 fessor of Physiology, viii. 665. 

 Scharf, G., Portraiture : its Fallacies 



and Curiosities as connected with 



English History, iv. 543. 

 Scheele discovers Chlorine, vi. 199. 

 Schehallien Experiment, ii. 18. 

 Scheibler's Tonmesser, ix. 538. 

 Schelske, Nervous Agent, iv. 587, 



590. 

 Schiapparelli on Orbit of Meteors, ix. 



45. 

 Schliemann's Excavations at Troy, vii. 



119; Letter from, 122. 

 Schmidt's Drawing of Solar Eclipse 



(1851), VI. 293. 

 Schonbein's Ozone, i. 94 ; vi. 546 ; and 



Antozone, iii. 70. 

 Experiments on Variations of the 



Colour of Bodies, i. 400. 

 Schrotter's Amorphous Phosphorus, i. 



135. 

 Schultze's Gun-sawdust, iv. 621. 

 St'hunck on Indigo, ix. 582. 

 Schuster, A., Modern Spectroscopy, ix. 



493. 

 Schwabe's Observations of Spots on 



the Sun, i. 237. 

 Schwann, Discovers Yeast Plant, vi. 



7 ; Researches, viii. 29. 

 Schweinfurth on Bongo Women, ix. 



395. 

 Science as a Branch of Education, ii. 



556 ; applied to Calico Printing, iii. 



201 ; to Military Purposes, 243. 

 Scientific Men, their Nature and Nur- 

 ture, VII. 227. 



Theories, viii. 216. 



Sclater, P. L., Zoological Distribution, 



viii. 511. 

 Scott, A. J., Physics and Metaphysics 



(no ^&.sf racO, II. 439. 

 R. H., Work of the Meteorological 



Office, V. 535. 

 Weather Knowledge, vii. 34 ; x. 



323. 



■ S., Donation, v. 24 ; viii. 42. 



Scottish Highland Language, &c. ix. 



547. 

 Sculpture, x. 280 ; Mode of Exhibiting, 



VII. 431. 

 Sea, Temperature, &c. vi. 63, 81, 82. 

 Waves, VI. 355 ; vii. 297. 



