BUS] 



345 



[BUS 



Russell, John Scott. 13. Report of a Committee 



on the Form of Ships. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1841, 



pp. 325-326; 1842, pp. 104-105. 

 14. Supplementary Report of a Committee 



on Waves. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1842 (pt. 2), pp. 



19-21. 

 15. On the indicator of speed of steam 



vessels. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1842 (pt. 2), p. 



109. 



16. On the abnormal tides of the Frith of 



Forth. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1842 (pt. 2), pp. 115- 

 116. 



17. Report of a series of observations on 



the tides of the Frith of Forth and the east 

 coast of Scotland. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1843, pp. 

 110-112. 



18. Notice of a report of the Committee 



on the Form of Ships. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1843, 

 pp. 112-115. 



19. On the application of our knowledge 



of the laws of sound to the construction of build- 

 ings. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1843 (pt. 2), pp. 96- 

 98 ; Majocchi, Ann. Fis. Chim. XXVIII., 1847, 

 pp. 121-123. 



20. Description of a Marine Salinometer 



to indicate the density of brine in the boilers of 

 marine steam-engines. Edinb. New Phil. Journ. 

 XXXIV., 1843, pp. 278-285. 



21. Report on Waves. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 



1844, pp. 311-390. 



22. On the tides of the east coast of Scot- 

 land. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1844 (pt. 2), p. 6. 



23. On the nature of the Sound-wave. 

 Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1844 (pt. 2), p. 11. 



24. On the resistance of railway trains. 



Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1844 (pt. 2), p. 96. 



25. Account of a cheap and portable self- 

 registering Tide-Gauge, invented by John WOOD. 

 [1844.] Edinb. New Phil. Journ. XXXVIIL, 



1845, pp. 71-76. 



26. On the terrestrial mechanism of the 



Tides. Edinb. Roy. Soc, Proc. I., 1845, pp. 

 179-182. 



27. Notice of the remarkable mathematical 



properties of a certain parallelogram. Edinb. 

 Roy. Soc. Proc. I., 1845, pp. 187-188. 



28. On the law which connects the elasti 



force of vapour with its temperature. Edinb. 

 Roy. Soc. Proc. I., 1845, pp. 227-231. 



29. On the law which governs the resist- 

 ance to motion of railway trains at high velo- 

 cities. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1846 (pt. 2), pp. 109- 



30. On the practical forms of breakwaters, 



sea walls, and other engineering works exposed 

 to the action of the waves. 



Proc. VI., 1847, pp. 135-143. 



VOL. V. 



Civ. Eng. Instit. 



Russell, John Scott. 31. On the practical forms 

 of engineering works exposed to the action of 

 the waves of the sea, and on the advantages and 

 disadvantages of certain forms of construction 

 for breakwaters and sea-walls. Franklin Inst. 

 Journ. XIV., 1 . 1847, pp. 13-15. 



32. On certain effects produced on sound 



by the rapid motion of the observer. Brit. 

 Assoc. Rep. 1848 (pt. 2), pp. 37-38. 



33. On recent applications of the wave- 

 principle to the practical construction of steam- 

 vessels. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1849 (pt. 2), pp. 

 30-33. 



34. On wave-line ships and yachts. Roy. 



Inst. Proc. I., 1851-54, pp. 115-119. 



35. On the progress of naval architecture 



and steam navigation, including a notice of the 

 large ship of the Eastern Steam Navigation 

 Company. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1854 (pt. 2), pp. 

 160-161. 



36. Mechanical structure of the Great 



Eastern steamship. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1857 

 (pt. 2), pp. 195-198. 



37. The Wave-line principle of ship con- 

 struction. Naval Architects' Instit. Trans. I., 

 1860, pp. 184-211 ; II., 1861, pp. 230-245. 



38. Disturbing forces of locomotive en- 

 gines. Civ. Eng. Instit. Proc. XXII., 1862-63, 

 pp. 107-108. 



39. On the rolling of ships, as influenced 



by their forms and by the disposition of their 

 weights. Naval Architects' Instit. Trans. IV., 

 1863, pp. 219-231. 



4O. Postscript to Mr. FROUDE'S remarks 



on Rolling. Naval Architects' Instit. Trans. 



IV., 1863, pp. 276-283. 

 Russell) John Scott, and (Sir) John Robison. 



Report on Waves. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 1837, p. 



417-496 ; 1840, pp. 441-443. 

 Russell, Patrick. Observations on the orifices 



found in certain poisonous snakes, situated 



between the nostril and the eye. Phil. Trans. 



1804, pp. 70-76. 



2. Remarks on the voluntary expansion of 



the skin of the neck in the Cobra de Capello, 

 or Hooded Snake of the East Indies ; with a 

 description of the structure of the parts which 

 perform that office, by Sir Everard HOME. 

 Phil. Trans. 1804, pp. 346-352. 



Russell, Robert. On the Meteorology of the 

 United States and Canada. Brit. Assoc. Rep. 

 1855 (pt. 2), pp. 42-44. 



2. Some remarks on the storm of the 6th 



and 7th of February 1856. Edinb. New Phil. 

 Journ. IV., 1856, pp. 243-253. 



3. The rotatory theory of storms. Edinb. 



New Phil. Journ. VIL, 1858, pp. 91-106. 



4. On the Gulf-Stream. Edinb. New Phil. 



Journ. VIII., 1858, pp. 70-87. 



x x 



