ANALYTICAL INDEX 



Names of quoted books, memoirs, journals, and publications of learned 

 societies are printed in thick (Clarendon) type, and the latter are in<!exed 

 under the name of the society. 



The substance of the titles of the text is printed in small capitals, and is 

 followed by the word 'introduction', or 'essay', with its number. The sub- 

 stance of the sectional headings of the text is followed by the contraction 

 ' introd.', or the number, omitting the word ' essay '. 



Quoted titles, beginning with the same word as titles or headings of the text, 

 precede these latter, and are themselves arranged in the alphabetical order 

 of the second word. Titles, &c., of the text, beginning with the same word, 

 are not thus arranged, but are placed in the order of pagination before the 

 list of references under the same word. 



References under one word are generally given in the order of pagination. 

 In certain cases, however, they are grouped more or less completely accord- 

 ing to subject. 



Footnotes, containing references only, are rarely indexed. 



Species are indexed under generic as well as specific names, but the 

 analysis of text is given under the specific name alone. The generic name is 

 distinguished by a capital initial letter. 



Popular terms with a definite connotation such as * beetles', ' butterflies', 

 * caterpillars ', and ' weevils ', are fully indexed, in preference to their more 

 technical equivalents ' Coleoptera', * Rhopalocera ', ' Lepidopterous larvae', 

 and ' Curculionidae ', respectively. When the connotation is less definite, 

 e.g. in 'flies' and 'bugs', full references are given under the scientific 

 equivalents, ' Diptera' and ' Hemiptera' respectively. 



'f.' indicates 'form'; 'sub-sp.' indicates 'sub-species'; 'sp.' indicates 

 'species.' 



Abispa, species of, resemble other 



Hymenoptera in Australia, 278. 



Abnormal conditions unnecessary 

 for production of Acquired Charac- 

 ters, 143. 



Abraxas eiridoides, 231, 349. 



Abundance of butterflies, various 

 causes of, 332. 



Abyssinia, antinorii, an ancestral 

 sub-sp. of the Pap. dardanus group, 

 373-5; female of Abyssinian anti- 

 7wrii figured by Weismann in place 

 of male of another sub-sp. with 

 different distribution, 375. 



acara, Acraea, a model of wet f. of 

 Precis sesamus^ 339 n. i. 



Accidental likeness, an inadequate 

 explanation of mimicry, xxiii, 257. 



' Accidental ', Prichard's use of term 

 similar to Darwin's, 185. 



Acerata, place in classification of, 

 33 ; relation of Trilobites to, 39. 



acheloia igotzius), Ilypiinis 

 {Byblta), mating of similar seasonal 

 forms of, 87 ; dry f. of bred from wet, 

 341 ; wet f. of a mimic of A. seretia 

 type, dry f. procryptic, 341. 



Achievement, contrasted witli 

 faculty in man, 170, 171. 



achine, Teracolus, experiments on 

 seasonal forms of, 311; Mullerian 

 mimicry chiefly in dry f. of, 342. 



Acquired Chakacikks, the 

 Study of Insects and Question 

 OF Transmission of, Essay V, 



139-72. 

 ♦Acquired Characters' de- 



FINED,V. 140-4 ; see also 73 n. i. 



Acquired Characters (Ex- 

 perience), BEARING of INSECT 



