CONTENTS, 



MEMOIRS. 



I. Plumbism in Pottery Workers. By William Burton, 



^'C-S PP J g 



II. The Solubility of certain Lead Glasses or Fritts used in the 

 Preparation of Pottery Glazes. By William Jack.son, 

 A.R.C.S., and Edmund M. Rich, B.Sc pp. i_ic 



III. The Thermodynamical Properties of Superheated Steam, and 



the Dryness of Saturated Steam. By 7. H. Grindley, 

 M-Sc ■ pp.' ,_„ 



IV. Note on D'Orbigny's figure of Onychotetithis dussumieri. By 



W. E. IIOYLE, M.A., F.R.S.E. nn I -> 



pp. 1 — J 



V. Sur la Flore du Corps Humain. (The Wilde Lecture.) By 



Dr. Elie Metchnikoff, For. Mem. R.S pp. i— 3S 



VI. On a New Species of Sepia and other Shells collected by 

 Dr. R. Koettlitz in Somaliland. By W. E. Hoyle and 

 R. Standen. Plate I. pp_ i_5 



VII. On the Phloem of Lepidophloios and Lepidodendron. By 



F. E. Weiss, B.Sc, F.L.S. Plates 2 ami 3. ... pp. 1—22 



VIII Selections from the Correspondence of Lieutenant-Colonel 

 John Leigh Philips, of Mayfield, Manchester. Part III. 

 By W. Barnard Faraday, LL.B pp. 1—59 



IX. On the Generic Names Octopus, Eledone, and Histiopsis. 



ByW.E. Hoyle. pp. ^_^ 



X. On the Construction of Entropy Diagrams from Steam Engine 

 Indicator Diagrams. By George Wilson, D.Sc, and 

 H. NOHLE, B.Sc pp. i_j2 



XI. The Representation on a Conical Mantle of the Areas on a 



Sphere. By C. E. Stromeyer, M.Inst.C.E. ... pp. 1—3 



XII. The Macro- Lepidoptera of Sherwood Forest. By J. Ray 



Hardy. ... 



PP- 1—5 



