IN ! 





Fertilisation of Orchx 



■ iew, ii. 313 ; 1 i iew, 



ii. 290, 291 ; iK 



in, ii. 306, 307 ; 1 1. 



M tiller's Befru htun ten, 



the outcome 



lity, Natural Selection and, i. 295 ; 



and sterility, i. 1 1 \ . 295 : 



Primula, ii. 310 ; Scott on variel 



anil relative, ii. 

 . ii. 278 

 F. M tiller on fertilisation of, 



ii 366 

 Finmark, Bravais on sea-beaches of, 



ii. 176, [83 

 Fir (Silver), Witches' brooms of. ii. 422 

 First . les, Spencer's, ii. 442 



Fish, Pictet and Humbert on 1 



ii. 160 

 Fiske. J., letter to. i, 333-4 



are-eruptions, ii. - 

 Fitton, reference to his work, ii. 231 

 FitzRoy, Capt., and the Beagle voyage, 



i. 8. ii; writes preface to account of 



the voyage, i. 39 ; Darwin nearh 



jected by, i. 194 ; letter to Times, 



i. 129 

 Flagellars, as a climber, ii. 342 

 Flahault, on the peg in Cucurbita, ii. 



427. 42 

 Fleeming Jenkin, review of Origin by : 



see Jenkin 

 Flinders, M., voyage to Terra Aust 



by, i. 444 

 Flint implements found near Bedford, 



ii. 190 

 Flint . lance and derivation of, at 



Down, i. 34, 35 ; ii. 165 ; Darwin on 



their upright position in gravel, ii. 



165-6 



ing ice, Darwin on agency of, ii. 



16S ; J. Geikie underestimates its 



importance, ii. 170; transporting 



power of. ii. 14S-9, 1 

 Flora, Darwin's idea oi an I I pian, ii. 



374 ; Hooker's scheme for a, ii. 279, 



373-5 ; Hooker's work on Tasma- 



nian, i. 199 



Hooker's, i- 46, 67, 



404, 405. 410, 426 

 a fossilis arcl\ . Heer's, ii. 239 

 Floras: N. American, i. 170, 429-35 : 



Arctic, i. 155 ; British, i. 99 ; Colonial. 



i. 260; European, i. 170; French, i. 



100; Greenland, L 155: Holland, i. 



100; India, i. 86; Japan, i. I 



New Zealand, i. 95, 100 ; distribution 



°fi i- 53i 54 : of islands, i. 241, 4047 : 



local, i. 105, 107 ; tabulation of, i. 



99-100, 107 



, ii. 

 197 : ' 

 Flourens, e.y 

 no 



1 1., I • ttei 

 251 ; on m. I the os coccyx, ii. 



37 



ering p! 



thern Continent, ii. 

 sudden appearance of, ii. 20. i\. 



Flowers, at i 



work on forms of, i. 369 ; 

 i. 142 ; morphological character 

 273; ii i; regular and irregu- 



lar, i. ;iilisation in in- 



conspicuous, ii. 414 ; ignorance 

 botanists on mechanism o(, ii. 2 



Dr. 

 Ogle's translation of Kei 

 mittel ii. 392, 413 



Flying machine, Darwin per's 



proposed, ii. 445 



Folding of strata, ii. 145 



•.ion and cle ii. 199-210; 



reference by A. Darker to work on, 

 ii. 199 



Foliation, aqueous deposition and, ii. 

 207, 209 ; Darwin considers his ob- 

 servations on cle ing 

 of confidence than those on, ii. 200 ; 



win on, ii. 200, 204 ; parallel] 

 with cleavage, ii. 2 

 lation to rock-curvature, ii. 208 



Food, as determining number of sp>. 



5. 

 minifera, ii. 2 



ii. 201, 202 : on 

 dilleras, ii. 144 ; on el .n Chili, 



ii. 139; on niti * >da lnrds in 



S. America, ii. 141 

 Forbes, E., ! 

 on •-, i. 41 1 : on Cham- 



bers as author of the 

 on continental ex- 

 continental : ; 1 >ar- 

 " . 95 ; article 

 on distribution, i. 51 ; ii. -. 

 continuity of land, n plant- 



; J, 461 : 

 ductory lecture 1 



bu:. .ten- 



Hera, i. : 

 lecture by, i. 

 Darwin from, i. 52-5 ; on M 

 car in- 

 land, i. 411: Polarity theoi 

 84 j . ii. 230 ; on Br 



shells, i. 100 ; too speculative, i. 412 ; 

 on subsidence, i. 5 wn, 



