PLA 



PUBLICATIONS OF THE CANADIAN INSTITUTE 



PLA 



Ser. Vol. Page 



Plants — Con. 



Carbon dioxide taken from 



air by II ix 



Chemical action in II ix 



Devonian, from Gaspe II iv 



Does distilled water become 

 alkaline when placed on 

 leaves of IV vii 



Flower development from 



buds in II x 



Food of Platysamia ce- 

 CROPIA. ByWm. Brodie. Ill iv 



Growth, etc II ix 



How, Grow. By Asa Gray: 



reviewed II iv 



How, Life is distributed 

 inCanada AND Why. By 

 A. T. Drummond . IV viii 



Indistinct fucoids fossils 

 from Belleville II v 



Influence of Moon's light 



upon II IV 



Influence of Solar Radi- 

 ation ON vital powers 

 OF. By J. H. Gladstone: 

 reprint • ■ • I m 



Instructions for collecting 



for natural history I i 



Investigators of I i 



Judge Logic's collection of 



Canadian II xiv 



List of Canadian, collected 

 by Judge Logic of Hamil- 

 ton II XIV 



List of Indigenous, found 

 IN neighbourhood of 

 Hamilton with dates of 

 finding and flowering. 

 By Dr. and W. Craigie... I ii 



List of, collected chiefly 

 in immediate neighbor- 

 hood OF London. By W. 

 Saunders II viii 



List of, eaten by Western 



Denes IV iv 



List of Plants not found 

 at Belleville II xiv 



Marine plants in blue schales 



at Toronto I i 



Observations on the 

 Leafing and Flowering 

 of I I 



On poisonous plants 

 which are indigenous 

 to, or which have be- 

 become naturalized, in 

 neighborhood of tor- 

 ONTO. By Ed. M. Hodder I i 204, 



On FRUITING AND FLOWER- 

 ING OF Plants I i 



Oxygen given out by II ix 



419 

 423 

 316 



263 



372 



211 

 430 



145 



23 



45 



223 



112 



176 

 80 



281 



291 



222 



219 



128 



302 



150 



182 



218 



201 

 419 



Plants — Con. 



Parthenogenesis of. By 

 B. Seemann: reprint. . . . 



Plants and the Atmos- 

 phere. By M. J. Jamin: 

 reprint 



Pericycle 



Phylogeny of vascular 



Plants and Botanists: re- 

 print I I 



Relations of colour and 

 form in. By Dr. G. Dic- 

 kie: reprint I III 



Potash can replace Soda in . II vi 



Respiration of II ix 



Time when various plants 



flower around Toronto. . . I i 



Yielding fibres suitable for 



paper material II xi 



Plasma. 



Origin of physiological re- 

 lation of chemical ele- 

 ment in blood plasma. ... IV vii 



Proportions of magnesium 



in sea water and, different IV vii 



Proportions of sodium, po- 

 tassium and calcium in 

 sea water and, different. . IV vii 



Sodium, potassium, and cal- 

 cium in, in relative propor- 

 tion to that now in sea 

 water; magnesium in less 

 proportion IV vii 



Surface tension of blood, 

 lower than that of istonic 



salt solution IV ix 



Plaskett, J. S. 



Photography in natural 



colours IV VII 



Plasmosomata, migrated or 

 extruded in Amblystoma 



and Diemyctylus IV i 



Plaster Industry, Canada. . . IV viii 

 Plaster of Paris, production 



in Canada, 1902 IV viii 



Plastic, material for forming 



various objects I i 



Plataleinse, generic charac- 

 ters II XI 



Platanacese. 



Canadian species II xiv 



Hamilton species Ill ii 



Localities Canadian species . II xiv 



London species II viii 



Platanus occidentalis, 



Canadian II vi 



Platner. 



Manner of derivation of 



enzmes in gland cells: ref. IV ii 

 Structure in pancreatic cells 



of Amphibia: ref IV i 



384 



79 



144 

 51 



422 



202 



198 



539 

 539 



539 



561 



397 



371 



267 

 172 



189 



288 



156 



298 

 152 

 649 

 233 



38 



241 

 255 



