VI 



Index 



r Nature, 

 \^March 30, 1916 



Carpenter (T. M.), Comparison of Methods for determining 

 the Respiratory Exchange of Man, 556 



Catr (W. K.) [obituary], 232 



Cairasco (P.), Solar Eclipse of April 17, 1912, 16; Structure 

 of the Line Spectrum of the Solar Corona, 417 ; Struc- 

 ture of the Spectrum of the Solar Corona, 439 ; Total 

 Solar Eclipse. August 21, 1914, 51 



Cairel (P.), The Popularisation of Science, 510 



Cairington-Smith (T.) [obituary], 47 



Cairuthers (F. G.), A Relation between Atomic Weights 

 and Radio-active Constants, 565 



Carse (Dr. G. A.), and G. Shearer, A Course in Fourier's 

 Analysis and Periodogram Analysis for the Mathe- 

 matical I^aboratory, 617 



Carson (Sir E.), Address to the Institute of Industry, 571 



Carson (G. St. L.), and Prof. D. E. Smith, Elements of 

 Algebra, part ii., 423; Plane Geometry, 2 parts, 423 



Carter (H. J.), Australian Strongyliinas and other Tene- 

 brionidas, 333 



Carter (Miss L. A.), Amoeba proteus, 350 



Cary (L. R.), Influence of the Marginal Sense Organs on 

 Functional Activity, 557 



Case (Prof. E. C), The Vertebrate Fauna of the Permo- 

 Carboniferous red beds of North America, 93 



Castle (Prof. W.), Experiments with Hooded-rats, 684 



Cavasino (Dr. A.), The Avezzano Earthquake of February 

 24, 1904, 78 



Cave (Capt. C. J. P.), Winter Thunderstorms, 426 



Cazin (M.), and Mile. S. Krongold, The Methodical Use of 

 Antiseptics, 613 



Ces^ro (Prof. G.), A Simple Demonstration of the Law of 

 Miller, 611 



Chadwick (H. C), Asteroids feeding upon Living Sea- 

 Anemones. 677 



Chakravarti (M.), The Geography of Orissa in the Sixteenth 

 Century, 137 



Chamberlin (Prof. T. C), Prof. H. F. Reid, Dr. J. F. 

 Itayford, The Condition of the Earth's Interior, 488 



Chamot (Prof. E. M.), Elementary Chemical Micrpscopy, 84 



Chapman (A. C), Chemists and Manufacturers, 062 



Chapman (F.), New Genus of Dibranchiatc Ccphalopods, 49 



Chapman (S.), Kinetic Theory of Gaseous Viscosity, etc., 

 360 



Chappuis (Dr. P.) [death], 710 



Charlesworth (Miss), Education of Girls with special 

 reference to their Careers, 329 



Charlier (Prof. C. V. L.), The Mean Distances and 

 Luminosities of Stars of Different Spectral Types, 686 



Charnock (Prof. G. F.), Mechanical Technology, 700 



Charroppin (Rev. C. M.) [death], 292 



Chatelier (H. Le), and J. Lemoine, The Heterogeneity of 

 Steels, 166 



Chatley (Prof. H.), Approximate Determination of Planetary 

 Longitude, 95 



Chatterton (A.), Manufacture of Jaggery in South India, 270 



Cheshire (F. J.), elected President of the Optical Society, 

 710 ; The Modern Range-finder, 546 



Chevalier (Rev. Father S.), Measures of Jupiter, 154 



Chisholm (G. G.), Classification of Land Forms, 27*6 



Chree (Dr. C), Kew Magnetic Data, 1890 to 1900, 640 ; 

 Research in Terrestrial Magnetism, 604 



Christy (M.), Distances at which Sounds of Heavy Gun- 

 firing are heard, 228; The Definition of "Right" and 

 "Left," 668 



Church (Sir A.), bequest by, to Oxford University, 304 ; 

 presentation of Gem-stones of, to the British Museum, 



463 

 Civita (Prof. T. L.), Reduction of the Problem of Three 



Bodies, 153 

 Clapp (C. H.), The South-east of Vancouver Island, 662 

 Clark (H. L.), Habits and Reactions of Comatulids at 



Torres Straits, 319 

 Clarke (A. H.), Asymmetry in the Genera and Families of 



recent Crinoids, 177 

 Clarke (F. W.), and W. C. Wheeler, Analyses of Stony 



Corals, 362 

 Clarke (G. A.), Observations of Auroras, 464 

 Clarke (J. W.), Water Analysis from the Laboratory of 



the U.S. Geological Survey, 297 

 Clarke (Dr. Mary), appointed Lecturer in Hygiene at the 



Birmingham Training College for Women, 192 



Clarke (Dr. Michell), Bradshaw Lecture, 248 

 Clarke (W. Eagle), The St. Kilda Wren, 269 

 Clarke (W. G.), Report on the Excavations at Grime's 



Graves, Weeting, Norfolk, March-May, 19 14, 316 

 Clayton (W.), Thermal Decomposition of Hydrogen 



Peroxide, 330 

 Clementi (Dr. A.), The Action of Arginase, 353 ; Sorensen's 



Titration Process, 353 

 Clerk (Dr. Dugald), to deliver the Thomas Hawksley 



Lecture, 150 

 Clifton (Prof. R. B.), elected to an Honorary Fellowship at 



Wadham College, 472 ; retirement of, 248 

 Cloutman (Lieut. W. R.) [obituary], 12 

 Coit (Prof. J. E.), Citrous Fruits, 58 

 Coker (Prof. E. G.), Polarised Light and its applications to 



Engineering, 718; Report of Committee on Complex 



Stress Distribution, 299 

 Cole (Prof. F. J.), and Miss N. B. Eales, History of 



Comparative Anatomy, 327 

 Cole (Prof. G. A. J.), Classification of Land Forms, 276 ; 



Opening Address to the Geology Section, British 



Association, 99 

 Colin (H.), Sterilisation of Water by Carbonic Acid, 417 

 Collinge (W. E.), A Revision of British Idoteidse, 668; 



Terrestrial Isopoda from Spain, 529 ; The Attacks of 



Birds upon Fruit, 89 ; the Venous System of the Frog, 



519 

 Collins (T. S. D.), awarded the Naval Architects' Scholar- 

 ship, 26 

 Collins (W. F.), Chinese Mining Legislation, 612 

 Collins (W. H.), The Gowganda Mining Division, 662 

 Colson (A.), Heats of Solution of Common Salt, 193 

 Colthrup (C. W.), Nidification Instinct in the Redshank, 76 

 Comissopulos (N. A.), Seasonal Variability of Rainfall over 



the British Isles, 361 

 Compton (A.), Meteorological Factors and Cerebro-spinal 



Meningitis, 502 

 de Coninck (CE.), and Gerard, Atomic Weight of Cadmium, 



445 

 Conklin (E. G.), Why Polar Bodies do not develop, 137 

 Conway (Prof. A.), Relativity, 617 

 Conway (Prof. R. S.), Literary and Classical Teaching and 



the War, 328 ; Religion and Linguistics of Early Italy, 



300 

 Cook (F. C), R. H. Hutchison, and F. M. Scales, Destruc- 

 tion of Housefly Maggots, 120 

 Cooke (W. W.), Bird Migration, 604 

 Coppock (J. B.), and G. A. Lodge, An Introduction to 



Mining Science, 198 

 Corder (J. S.), Gift of Flint Implements to the Ipswich 



Museum, 572, 603 

 Cortie (Rev. A. L.), Efficiency of Sun-spots in relation to 



Terrestrial Magnetic Disturbances, 332 ; The Aurora 



Australis of June 17, 1915, 114; The Aurora Borealis 



of November 5, 342 ; the Order of Stellar Evolution, 241 

 Costantin and Bois, Commercial Vanilla of Tahiti, 27 

 Coulson (J.), Apparatus for reproducing and measuring 



short Intervals of Time, 690 

 Coupin (H.), Ferment Action of Marine Bacteria, 361 

 Coupland (Dr. S.), Harveian Oration, 294 

 Courtney (Mrs. W. L.), Education of Girls with special 



reference to their Careers, 328 

 Coventry (B. O.), Jand Forests of the Punjab, 377 

 Coward (Dr. H. F.), and F. Bailey, Causes of Luminosity 



in Coal-gas Flames, 668 

 Coward (T. A.), Changes in the Habits of Black-headed 



Gull, 501 

 Cowles (R. P.), Habits of some Tropical Crustacea, 76 

 Cox (L. E.), Experimental Plant Phy.siology for Beginners, 



140 

 Cox (Dr. A. H.), and A. K. Wells, The Ordovician 



Sequence in Cader Idris, i£;7 

 Craib (W. G.), appointed Assistant to the Professor of 



Botanv in the University of Edinburgh, 75 

 Craig (E. H. C), The Origin of Oil Shale, 529 

 Crapper (Prof. E. H.), Arithmetic of Alternating Currents, 4 

 Crawley (A. E.), An Introduction to Ethics for Training 



Colleges, bv G. A. Johnston, 531:; ; The Citizen and the 



State, 83 ; The Universities and the War, 317 

 Crockett (T.), and B. C. Wallis, North America during the 



Eighteenth Century, 396 



