PART II. -PAPERS (CLASSIFIED). 



Anthropology and Philology- 

 Autbropology 

 Philology 



Botany 



Chemisthy 



Geology 



Physics 



iCoOLOIiY'— 



Mammalia 



Aves ... 



Reptilia 



Amphibia 



Pisces 



Tunlcata 



Cephalochorda 



Hemiehorda ... 



Mollusca 



lusecta 



Myriapoda 



Onychophora 



-■Vracbnida 



Crustacea 



SYNOPSIS. 



PAGKS 



.. 43-4.5 



46 



.. 46-54 



.. 54-56 



.. .56-64 



.. 04-66 



G6-()7 



67-70 



70-71 



71 



71-72 



72 



72 



7:5 



73-74 



74-78 



78 



78 



78-79 



79-80 



Zoology— (•'<//^(.')«W. 

 .\nnulata 

 Echinodermata 

 Molluscoida ... 

 Rotifera 



Platyhelminthes 

 C(£leDtei-ata ... ... ,,\ 



Porifera 

 Protozoa 

 Miscellaneous ... .'' ' 



MlSCKLLANEOUS— 



Addresses 



Economics ... ... ... ' 



Education 



Engineering, Mechanics, and Scientific Ai 



pliances 

 Exploration and General Geography 

 Geometry, Mathematics, Surveying 

 History ... ... ... . 



Literature and Music ... .'. 



3Iedicine and Sanitation ... ... 



Metaphysics... ... ... [[[ 



Obituary ... ... ..' 



Statistics ... ... ... 



Trade and Industry ... .. ''' 



80 

 81 

 81 

 81 

 81 

 81 

 81 

 82 



. 82-83 

 83 

 83 



. 83-85 

 85 



. 85-86 

 86 

 86 

 87 

 87 

 88 

 88 

 88 



anthropology and philology. 



axthropolo(;y. 



Booiiierana, Oriuiii of the (\\. D. Campbell). 15, 



459. 



Chatham Islands (see Morioiis, p. 45). 



Civilisation of the Pacific (C. Phillij].*), 9, -in. 



Congenital Stigmata (E. Tregear), 31, 023. 



Existence of Man in N.Z. at or before the Volcanic 

 Era, Discovery of Cut Stump of Tree giving 

 Evidence of (.1 Goodall), 7, 144. 



Family Marks (J. Rutland), 40, 563. 



Fiji Fire Ceremonv, Account of the (T. M. 

 Hocken), 31, 667.' 



Fiji Fire-walking Ceremon3\ with a Probable Ex- 

 planation of the My.stery (R. Fulton), 35, 187. 



Food Plants now^ used by Civilised Man as com- ; 

 pared with those used in Prehistoric Times 

 (W. T. L. Travers), 18, 30. 



•<Treenstone, Modern Historv of a Block of (W. 

 Colenso), 27, 598. 



Hawaii-nei and the Hawaiians (F. B. Hutchin- 

 son), 15, 467. j 



Life in the South Seas : Fairv Tales anfl Folk- ' 

 lore (F. W. Chri.stian). 30, 03. j 



3Iaoris — 



Ancestry (.J. C. Ci-awford), 20. 414. ' 



Ancient Aboriginal Cdche.i- near Wanganui 



(H. C. Field), 9, 220. j 



Ancient Maoris, Memorabilia of Works, Deeds, 



and Sayings of the (W. Colenso), 24, 445. I 

 Ancient Native Burial-place, near Moa-bone ! 



Point, Sumner {.J. von Haast). 7, 86. 



Maoris — continued. 



Are thev Old Kumara-pits r (T. White) 32 



396. ' ' 



Arrow-propulsion by Maoris, Peculiar Method 



of (C. PhilUps), 10, 97. 

 Art of the Whare Pom : Notes on the Clothing 



of the Ancient Maori (E. Best), 31, 625. 

 Aryo-Semitic Maori (A. S. Atkuison), 19, 552. 

 Aryo-Semitic Maori : Reply to A. S. Atkinson 



(E. Tregear), 20, 400. 

 Bone Comb for ornamenting the Head of a 



Maori Chief, foimd in (Jtago (A. Hamiltofi), 



25, 483. 

 Bone Lizard Pendant (A. Hamilton), 35, 111. 

 Bone Pendants found in South Island of N.Z. 



(A. Hamilton), 25, 489. 

 Building of Hotunui, Whare Whakairo, W. H. 



Taipari"s Carved House at Thames. 1878 



(Mereaua Mokomoko), 30, 41. • 



Burial-chests, Carved, in Auckland Museum, 



Notes on {T. F. Cheeseman), 39, 451. 

 Calabashes, Two, with Carved AVooden Necks 



called Tuki or Ko-ano-ano (A. K. Newman 1, 



36, 1, 527. 

 Camiibalism, Some Relics of (H. D. M. 



Haszard), 22, 104. 

 Canoe, Maori (R. C. Barstow), 11, 71. 

 Canoe that brought the Maoris to N.Z. (K. 



Watkins), 40, 568. 



