ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



69 



Goodsir, his investigations into the sub- 

 ject of the food of fishes, vi., 268, 283 



Goose barnacles, iii., 286-317. See 

 Barnacle geese. 



Gordon (of Cluny), Mr., aid given by 

 him towards construction of harbour 

 at Buckie, ix., 16 



Gordon, Surgeon-General, C.B., re- 

 marks by him on protection of fish 

 in Burmah, v., 1 86 



Gore-bill, another name for the gar- 

 pike, viii., 236 



Gore-bone, a local term for the snout 

 of the gar-pike, viii., 236 



Gorgonocephalus, or " Medusa's Head," 

 the name of a star-fish, iii., 331 



Gosden, Frank, pisciculturist to the 

 Duke of Wellington, successful rear- 

 ing of newly-hatched freshwater cray- 

 fish, vi., 341 



Gosnick, a name given in Scotland to 

 the saury, viii., 242 



Gosnold, Bartholomew (1602), state- 

 ment respecting the Cape Cod 

 Fishery, v., 3 



Gothenburg, value of the herrings and 

 sprats caught in its fishery district in 

 1880, v., 261 



Government brand on fish barrels. See 

 Branding. 



Gowdnook, a name given in Scotland 

 to the saury, viii., 242 



Gradient, explanation of the term as 

 applied to barometric readings, vii., 

 181 



Grains (cereals). See Cereals. 



Grampus, its early loss of teeth, ii., 

 185 ; remark by Professor Huxley 

 thereon, vi., 299 



Grand Bank cod fishery, v., 26 



Grand Lake stream, Maine, hatching 

 station there, v., 66 ; statement of 

 operations carried on there, v., 70 



" Grand Intercourse," a treaty between 

 England and the Burgundian Sove- 

 reign of the Netherlands for securing 

 the right of free fishery in the open 

 sea, ix., 461 



Grange Angling Society, iii., 177 



Grants for fish protection, in Scotland, 

 i., 500 



Grants or charters, royal, before Magna 

 Charta, as to exclusive right of fish- 

 ing in navigable rivers, i., 209; re- 

 specting the exclusive right to the 

 foreshore, ii., 307 



Granville, Lord, speech by him at 

 inaugural meeting, June 18, 1885, 

 iv., 20 



Grassington, Thresfield, and Linton 

 Angling Club, iii., 154 



Graswinckel, Dirk, his treatise in refu- 

 tation of Selden's "Mare Clausum," 

 ix., 473 



Gratings in artificial cuts to prevent 

 passage of young salmon, i., 220 



Gravel, its deposit in harbours, ix., 102 



Gray, Dr. J. E., on classification of 

 manatidae, iii., 229 ; on size of octo- 

 pus, iii. , 348 ; on undiscovered aquatic 

 reptiles, iii. , 436 



Grayling, specially abundant in Hamp- 

 shire, i., 165 ; its "special preserva- 

 tion" in private fisheries, i., 229; 

 its deposit of ova, ii., 18 ; classed 

 with the salmonidae, ii., 134; abun- 

 dant in the Wiley river, ii., 383 ; a 

 choice subject for the angler, ii., 389 ; 

 localities famous for grayling-fishing, 

 ii., 421-424; iii., 69, 145; its 

 aroma, iii., 14; use as a fish-crest, 

 iii., 74; its artificial hatching, by F. 

 Mather, in 1875, v., 14; its destruc- 

 tion in the Wye by pollutions, vii., 41 



Gray-lord, a local name for the coal- 

 fish, viii., 154 



Gray whale, frequents the coast of 

 California, v., 35 



Grays, name applied to young seals, 

 vii., 1 66 



Great Bohiislan Fishery, intermittent 

 periods of plenty and scarcity, iv., 



201 



Great Eastern Railway Fish Market, 

 Bishopsgate, opposition to it by the 

 authorities of the city of London, x., 

 460 



Great Lake fisheries, introduction of 

 steam vessels there, v., 10 



"Great-line fishing" on the east coast 

 of England, iv., 46 ; the mode of 

 capturing bottom fish, iv., 53 ; man- 



