Supplement to Nature,~\ 

 December \, 1892 J 



incle 



Seeley (Prof. H. G., F.R.S,), Delphinogiiatkus conocephalus, 

 166 ; Further Evidence of Endotkiodon bathystoma, 166 ; 

 the Laurischia of Europe and Africa, 238 

 Seciinger (H.), Nova Aurigae, 552 



Seismology: the Great Earthquake in Japan, 1891, 34; Com- 

 parison of Earthquake Measurements in a Pit and on the 

 the Surface, K. Sekiya and F. Omori, 85 ; Thunderstorms 

 and Sunspots, 488 



Sekiya (K.), Comparison of Earthquake Measurements in a Pic 

 and on the Surface, 85 



Semple (C. E. Armand), Elements of Materia Medica and 

 Therapeutics, including the whole of the remedies of the 

 British Pharmacopoeia of 1885, and its Appendix of 1890, 28 



Sennett (A. R.), Sound carrying Power of Water, 430 ; Smoke 

 Prevention, 431 



Serum of Blood, the Germicide and Antitoxical properties of 

 the, Herr I3uchner, 495 



Servia, Earthquake in, 594 



Severn V^alley Field Club, 572 



Sewage, Absorption and Filteration of, R. F. Grantham, 429 



Seward (A. C), Myeloxylon from the Millstone Grit and Coal 

 Measures, 555 



Sex, the Origin of. Dr. G. Mann, 404 



Sex in Education, Sir James Crichton-Browne, 13 



Seychelles : the Gigantic Land Tortoises of Aldabra Island, 

 Riseley Griffiths, 398 



Shand (A.), the Volume Effects of Magnetization, 262 



Sharks, Blue, Pilchards and, Matthias Dunn, 368 



Sharpe (R. Bowdler), Catalogue of the Specimens illustrating 

 the Osteology of Vertebrated Animals, Recent and Extinct, 

 contained in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons 

 of England, 125 



Shearman (T. S.), the Influence of Sunspots on Terrestrial 

 Magnetic Conditions, 278 



Sheep, Contagious Foot Rot in. Prof. G. T. Brown, 560 



Slieep in Kouniania, Carceag, an Enzootic Disease of, V. Babes, 

 436 



shells, Land and Freshwater, peculiar to the British Isles, 

 T. D. A. Cockerell, 76 ; R. F. Scharff, 173 



Shenstone (W. A.), Adhesion of Mercury to Glass in presence 

 of Halogens, 22; Platinous Chloride as a source of Chlorine, 

 22 



Siierring's (Mr. R. V.) Collections: the Orchids of Grenada, 

 300 



Shield Tunneling in Loose Ground, G. F. Deacon, 429 



Ship Canal proposed between the Forth and the Clyde, D. A. 

 Stevenson, 429 



Shipbuilding : Launch of the Cunard s.s. Campania, 472 



Shipbuilding in Portsmouth Dockyard, W. H. White, F.R.S., 

 337 



Schufeldl (R. W.), Ridgway on the Humming-birds, R. W. 

 Shufeldt, 465 



Siberia, Russian Geological, &c.. Expedition to East, 212 



Sibree (Rev. James), Imcrina, the Central Province of Mada- 

 gascar, 47 



Sidgwick (Prof. H.), Address to International Congress of Ex- 

 perimental Psychology, 363 ; Report of Census of Hallucina- 

 tions, 363 



Sidgwick (Mrs. H.), Experiments in Thought-Transference, 

 364 



Siemens (Ale.x. ), Two Electric Locomotives, 429 



Sight, Motion in the Line of, W. W. Campbell, 64 



Sikkim, Journey in. White and Hoffman, 477 



Silk Dyeing, Printing, and Finishing, Geo. H. Hurst, 75 



Sdk Industry at Malta, Byssus, late Rev. H. Seddall, 229 



Silvering Glass Mirrors, Mr. Common, 597 



Simon (L.), Observation of a Meteor, 48 



Sisal Grass in Mexico, the Culture of, 03 



Skeletons, Ancient, from Medum, Egypt, Dr. Garson, 433 



Sketches of British Insects, Rev. W. Ploughton, 540 



Sky, Photometric Observations of the Sun and, William Bren- 

 nand, 284 



Slavonia, Destructive Wind-rush in. Prof. Mohorovieic, 450 



Sleep, a New Theory of, Herr Rosenbaum, 595 



Sloyd, the English, S. Barter, 244 



Smith (E. Wythe), Measurement of Internal Existence ol Cells, 

 -237 



Smith (Rev. F. J.): Electric Tram Chronograph, 45; Breath 

 Figures, 236 ; an Acoustic Method whereby the Depth of 

 Water m a River may be Measured at a Distance, 246 ; on 



XXXIX 



the Discovery of the Common Occurrence of Pala;olithic 

 Weapons in Scotland, 432 



Smith (Dr. W. Ramsay), the Food of Fishes, 405 



Smithells (Prof.), Experiments on Flame, 402 



Smoke Prevention, A. R. Sennett, 431 ; Colonel E. Duller, 

 431 



Snake, a Bird'segg Eating, 185 



Snakes Sting, Origin of Idea that, Cyril Frampton, 418 



Snake-bites and Wild Beasts in Punjab, Casualties for 189 1 

 from, 133 



Snake-Poison, Proposed Systematic Enquiry (in India) into, 14 



Snow (B. W.), Refraction of Raya of Great Wave-length in 

 Rock Salts, Sylvine, and F^luorspar, 483 



Snow in Scotland, Stags Smothered last Winter by, 228 



Social Habits of Spiders, Dr. Henry C. McCook, 403 



Soil, Micro-organisms of the, Prof. Alfred Springer, 576 



Soils and Manures, John M. H. Munro, 125 



Soiree, the Royal Society, 44 



Solar Atmosphere, Researches on the, G. E. Hale, 192 



Solar Atmosphere, Hydrogen Spectrum in the, M. Deslandres, 

 401 



Solar Atmosphere, Thermal Absorption in the, E. B. Frost, 

 400, 455 



Solar Eclipse, the Total, April 15-16, 1893, 201 



Solar Halo, a, J. Edmund Clark, 222 



Solar Observations during First Quarter of 1892, M. Tacchini, 

 167 



Solar Observations at R. Osservatorio del Collegio Romano, 

 Prof. Tacchini, 334 



Solar Observations at Rome, Prof. Tacchini, 476, 524 



Solar Phenomena, Photographs of. Prof. G. E. Hale, 452 



Solar Photography, Prof. G. E. Hale, 455 



SoUas (W. J.), the Origin of Land Animals, 271 



Sollas (Prof.), Palaeozoic Rocks, 428 



Solpugidse Poisonous ? are the, Henry Bernard, 223 ; W. L. 

 Distant, 247 



Somersetshire, the Recent Discovery of an Ancient Lake- 

 Village in. Dr. R. Munro, 617 



Somerville (Mr.), Petrological Papers, 428 



Sonnblick Observatory, the, 332 



Sound-Carrying Power of Water, A. A. Sennett, 430 



South Kensington Museum, Reopening of the Wrought Iron 

 Work Gallery, 133 



South London Entomological and Natural History Society, 46 



Southam (A. D.), Electrical Engineering as a Profession, and 

 How to Enter it, 608 



Spain : a New Meteorological Journal, 616 



Sparrow's Antipathy to Purple, a, G. D. Haviland, 394 



Specific Conductivity of Thin Films, Profs. Reinoldand Riicker, 

 384 



Spectrophotometer, Prof. Koenig's New, 263 



Spectrum Analysis : the Construction of a Colour Map, Walter 

 Baily, 23 ; the Line Spectra of the Elements, Dr. G. John- 

 stone Stoney, F.R. S., 29, 126, 222, 268; Prof. C. Runge, 

 i<x>, 200, 247 ; Stars with Remarkable Spectra, 86 ; 

 Researches on the Solar Atmosphere, G. E. Hale, 192 ; the 

 Retardation in the Perception of the Different Rays of the 

 Spectrum, Aug. Charpentier, 192 ; Comparative Spectra of 

 High and Low Sun, 211; New Results as to Hydrogen, 

 obtained oy Spectro.scopic Study of Sun, M. Deslandres, 340 ; 

 Hydrogen Spectrum in the Solar Atmosphere, M. Deslandres, 

 401 ; the Lightning Spectrum, A. Fowler, 268 ; Stokes's 

 Law, its Verification and Interpretation, G. Salet, 364 ; the 

 Application of Interference Methods to Spectroscopic Measure- 

 ment, Prof. A. Michelson, 385 ; the Photography of Spectra 

 in Natural Colours, H. Krone, 449 ; Nebular Spectrums of 

 Nova Aurigse, Ralph Copeland, 464 ; the Spectrum of Nova 

 Auriga', Herr E. von Gothard, 620 ; Recent Spectro- 

 scopic Determinations, G. Johnstone Stoney, 513 



Speech of Monkeys, the. Prof. R. L. Gardner, 451 ; R. L. 

 Garner, C. LI. Morgan, 509 



Spencer (Prof. Baldwin), the Ceratodus, 161 ; a Trip to Queens- 

 land in search of Ceratodus, 305 



Spherometer, Prof. Prof. Abbe's Improved, 472 



Spider, a Sydney Birdcatching, Mr. Rainbow, 474 



Spiders, the Social Habits of, Dr. Henry C. McCouk, 403 



Spiders, Can they Prognosticate Weather Changes .•* Dr. 11. C. 

 McCook, 406 



Spinal Nerve- Impulses and Electromotive Changes, Victor 

 ilorsley, F.R.S., 606 



