BAS — BEA 



Bastian ; The Beginnings of Life, being 

 some Account of the Nature, 

 Modes of Origin, and Transfor- 

 mations of Lower Organisms (re- 

 view), xiii, 59-74. 



Bate and Westwood ; A History of 

 British Sessile-eyed Crustacea (re- 

 view), ii, 114, 115. 



BATESON, W. (1). The early stages in 

 the development of Balanoglossus 

 (sp. incert.). xxiv, 208-236, pis. 

 xviii-xxi. 



(2). The later stages in the de- 

 velopment of Balanoglossus kowa- 

 levskii, with a suggestion as to the 

 affinities of the Enteropneusta. 

 XXV (supplement), 81-122, pis. iv- 

 ix. 



(3), Continued account of the 



later stages in the development of 

 Balanoglossus kowalevskii, and of 

 the morphology of the Entero- 

 pneusta. xxvi, 511-533, pis. 

 xxviii-xxxiii. 



(4). The ancestry of the Chor- 



data. xxvi, 535-571. 



Bathybius, Huxley (13) ; x, 291 ; xi, 

 61, 62 ; xiv, 97 ; xv, 390-392. 



BAIIR, A. (1). On the ossification of the 

 primordial cartilage (transl.). vi 

 (o. s.), 26-31. 



(2). On Chitine (transl.). viii 



(o. s.), 264-268. 



BAUR, G. (1). On the quadrate in the 

 Mammalia (transl.). xxviii, 169- 

 180. 



Bdellostoma, head-kidney, Weldon (2). 



BEALE, L. S. (1). New methods of con- 

 structing the thin glass and built 

 cells for preserving objects in fluid, 

 i (o. s.), 54-56. 



(2). On the importance of recog- 

 nising substances of extraneous 

 origin when they occur in urine, 

 and of distinguishing them from 

 those bodies which enter into the 

 composition of urinary sediments, 

 i (o. s.), 92-97. 



(3). Method of applying chemi- 

 cal re-agents to minute quantities 

 of matter, ii (o. s.), 58, 59. 



(4). A simple form of portable 



microscope, with lever adjvistment, 

 which may be adapted to several 

 different purposes. (Transactions) 

 iv, 13, 14, pis. ii, iii. 



BEALE, L. S.— 



(5). Lectures on the Structure 



and Growth of the Tissues of the 

 Human Body (abstract), i, 183- 

 195; 1,235-264; ii, 1-26 j and ii, 

 75-96. 



(6). On a portable field- or 



clinical microscope. (Transactions) 

 ix, 3, 4. 



(7). On the formation of the 



so-called intercellular substance of 

 cartilage, and of its relation to the 

 so-called cells ; with observations 

 upon the process of ossification. 

 (Transactions) xi, 95-104, pis. viii, 

 ix. 



(8). On the ultimate distribu- 

 tion and function of very line 

 nerve-fibres, iv, 11-17. 



(9). On " Contractility " as 



distinguished from purely vital 

 movements, iv, 182-188. 



(10). Observations upon the 



nature of the red blood-corpuscle. 

 (Transactions) xii, 32-43, pis. vi, 

 vii. 



— • — (11). On the germinal matter 



of the blood, with remarks upon 

 the formation of fibrin. (Transac- 

 tions) xii, 47-63, pi. ix. 

 (12). On the structure and for- 

 mation of the sarcolemma of 

 striped muscle, and of the exact 

 relation of the nerves, vessels, and 

 air-tubes (in the case of insects) 

 to the contractile tissue of muscle. 

 (Transactions) xii, 34-108, pis. xiv, 



XV. 



— - — (13). Microscopical researches 

 on the cattle-plague, vi, 141-148. 



— — (14). On nutrition from a mi- 



croscopical point of view. (Trans- 

 actions) XV, 75-85. 



(15). On the germinal matter 



of the ovarian ova of the Stickle- 

 back. (Transactions) xv, 85, 86, 

 pi. vii. 



(16). New observations upon 



the minute anatomy of the papillae 

 of the frog's tongue, ix, 1-18, pis. 

 i-iv. 



(17). Facts bearing on the 



structure and arrangement of a 

 nervous mechanism demonstrated 

 in the auricle of the frog's heart, 

 ix, 152-154, pi. xiii. 



