GENERAL INDEX. 



519 



Contours, The, of great continents, 



i, 60. 



Cooper, Mr. T. T., on vast flocks 

 of Wildfowl in 

 China, iii, 231. 

 Cooper's Novels, see Fenimore 



Cooper. 

 Coral Islands, Lovely scenery upon, 



iii. 34-35- 

 Coral Reefs, Deep soundings upon 



edges of, iii, 33. 



Great Ocean rollers 



bursting upon, iii, 34. 



Cotton Tree, The Indian Red, 1,309. 



Crealock, General, on " missed 



shots," iii, 308. 



Cremony, Mr J., on the necessity of 

 vigilance among Red 

 Indians, ii, 89-90. 

 Crow, The East Indian in 

 Bazaars, etc., iii, 347-48. 

 Gumming, Mr. R. Gordon, on 

 driving game on the Afri- 

 can plains, iii, 271. 

 on accidents in Night 



Shooting, iii, 290. 

 on running game with 



horses, iii, 228. 

 on Elephants standing 



motionless among 

 bush, iii, 157. 

 on comfort in the field, 



iii, 245-46. 

 on aromatic plants, i, 



45- 



expedition saved by 



watching flights of 

 birds to Water, i, 

 321-2. 



on the great migrations 



of springbucks, iii, 

 .62-63. 



Retrospect of his own 



career as a hunter 

 by, i, 29. 



Custer, Gen. Geo A. (U.S.A.), on 

 Red Indian War Tactics, 

 ii, 91-2. 



Cyclones, The track of, in Ameri- 

 can forests, i, 144. 



Cyclones on the Hooghly River, 

 ii, 500. 



The great Indian, of 



1876, i, 123. 



The great, at the Mauri- 



tius, i, 123-126. 



in the United States, 



i, 137- 



Cypress Trees, Magnificent speci- 

 mens of American, ii, 1 7 6 . 



Daisy, The Common, as illustrating 

 the Sleep of Plants, i, 



295- 

 Darjeeling, The Indian Sanitarium 



of, ii, 420. 



Grand Panorama of the 



Snowy Range from, 

 ii, 421. 



Rainfall of, ii, 424. 



Darkness, Its value during the 

 Arctic Summer, ii, 265 . 

 Darwin, Mr. Charles, on "El gran 

 Seco " in La Plata, ii, 43 . 

 on great herds of game 

 in sterile tracts, iii, 52-53. 

 on the Sublimity of the 

 Primeval Forest, i, 34. 

 on the value of botanical 

 science to travellers, i,33. 

 on the Splendour of tro- 

 pical scenery, i, 33. 

 on the carriage of seeds 



by birds, ii, 116. 

 on the gigantic seaweeds 

 of the Southern Ocean, 

 iii, 32. 



on experiments on the 

 powers of Scent in Con- 

 dors, iii, 339. 

 on flamingoes and lakes 



of brine, iii, 370-71. 

 on objects passing in 



the zenith, iii, 382. 

 on audible sounds caused 

 by a mighty flight of 

 butterflies, iii, 412. 

 Retrospect of his own 

 career as a traveller by, 

 i, 32, 34 



