1916] Index to Volumes I to XXXI 191 



DiLLER, Joseph Silas vol. page 



Origin of Paleotrochis 16 59 



Distribution of ammonia between water and chloroform, 



Bell and Feild 29 119 



Dog-tooth spar from Gander Hall, analysis of crystals, 



Phillips 2 62 



Dolly, David Hough 



A bacteriologic study of the blank cartride 24 23 



Differential calculus, fundamental principles, Cain 9 5 



DuEKDEN, James Edwin 



A method of studying the septal sequence in Paleozoic 



corals 19 32 



Dunes of Gascony, Cobb 26 82 



Dynamics, fundamental bases, Cain 28 68 



Eaton, Henby Nelson 



Micro-structure and probable origin of flintlike slate 



near Chapel Hill, N. C 24 l 



Micropegmatite at Chapel Hill 24 104 



Notes on the petography of the granites of Chapel Hill, 



North Carolina 25 85 



Edwards, George Walter 



Some new salts of camphoric acid 5 g 



Electrolysis of water, Venable 4 



Elements historically considered, Venable 4 



Element definition, Venable 16 



Elevation of Chapel Hill, Gore 1 



Embryo of the bird, primitive streak and blastopore, Wilson 10 



Energy changes caused by a rise of temperature. Mills 18 



Eocene deposits in eastern North Carolina, Kerb 2 



Entomological fauna of North Carolina, Brimley and Sher- 

 man 20 



Erysiphew of Alabama, Atkinson 10 



Ethyl glucoside, attempts at forming, Harris 10 



Ethyl-phospho-platino-chloride compound with ammonia, 



Herty and Davis 24 



Fayetteville, topography. Fry 26 



Feild, Alexander Littlejohn 



The distribution of ammonia between water and chlo- 

 roform (with J. M. Bell) 27 119 



Notes on the birds of Chapel Hill, N. C, with particular 



reference to their migrations 28 16 



Electromotive force of silver nitrate concentration cells 



(with J. M. Bell) 29 45 



Ferns and their allies. Chapel Hill, Coker 23 134 



Fertilizer trade in North Carolina in 1886, Phillips 4 1 58 



Fertilizer samples, effect of pulverization, Battle 3 27 



Fiber, crude, determination. Withers 7 22, 25 



