Supplement to Nature^ 

 Deceuiber 5, 1895 J 



Index 



XXXV 



Minimum \Vind Velocities in United States, 335 ; Relations of 



Decimal Rise and Kail of Wind in United States, 539 

 Wales (H-K-H. the I'rince of), the British School at Athens, 349 

 Walford (E. A.), on the Succession of Limestones, Clays, and 



Sandstones in Oxfordshire, 560 

 Walker (G. H.), Curious Dynamical Property of Celts, 143 

 Walker (J. W.), Optical Activity of Metallic Lactates m Solu- 

 tion, 166 

 Wallace (Dr. Alfred K., I'.R.S.), Uniformitarianism in Geology. 



4 : the Evolution of Industrj-, Henry Dyer, 386 ; How was 



Wallace Led to the Discovery of Natural .Selection ? Dr. A. B. 



Meyer, F.R S., 415 ; Expressiveness of Speech, 587 

 Wallace (R. Hedger), Agriculture, 33S 

 Waller (Dr.), Influence of Chemical Reagents on Electric 



Excitability of Isolated Xerve, 604 

 Walter (MissL. Edna), Research in Education, 105 

 Walter (L. E.), Thio-derivatives from Sulphanilic Acid, 311 

 Ward (Prof. H. Marshall, F.R.S.), Untersuchungen liber die 



Starkekorner, Dr. A. Meyer, 640; the Formation of Bacterial 



Colonies, 658 

 Ward (Thos. ), Halley's Chart, 106 

 Warington (Prof. R.), How shall Agriculture best obtain the 



Help of Science ? 537 

 Warming (D. E. ), a Hand-book of Systematic Botany, loi 

 Warren (H. \'..). the Thermophone, 308 

 Washington National .-Vcademy, 48 

 Water in Crystalline Rocks, Boring for. 486 

 Water -Supply, Rural, .Allen CJreenwell and W. T. Curry, 617 

 Water- Beetle, Migration of a. Rose Haig Thomas, 223 

 Water- Pipes, Earth Temperatures and, Mr. Symons, 45 

 Water- Purification, the Part of Sedimentation in. Dr. H. |. 



van 't Hoff, 578 

 Waterspouts. Tempests and Tornadoes, Effects of Air carried 



below, without Gyration, in Interior of, H. Faye, 24 

 Waters (Sidney), | Distribution of Nebula; and Star-clusters, 



38 

 Watson Medal, Award of the, to Dr. S. C. Chandler, 113 

 Watson (W. ), the Scientific and Technical Papers of Werner von 



.Siemens, 73 ; the Results of a Comparison of Magnetic 



Standard Instruments, 533 

 Watts (F. ), Recent Earthquakes in Leeward Islands, 230 

 Watts (W. W. ), Crush-conglomerates of Isle of Man, 239 

 Wave on High .Seas, Laws of Extinction of Simple, I. 



Boussinesq, 264 

 Waves, .Abnormal Atlantic, James \'ate Johnson, 569 

 Wayside and Woodland Blossoms, F>!ward Step, 27 

 Weather and Disease, .Alex. B. Macdowall, 641 

 W'eather Fallacies, Richard Inwards, 377 

 W'eather Observations and Predictions, Thomas Russell, 98 ; H. 



C. Russell, F.R.S., 98 

 Weather, the Recent Dry, Prof. J. P. O'Reilly, 597 

 Webb (Wilfred Mark), the Cienus Tcstaulla, 597 

 Webber (Major-tleneral), on Light Railways as an Assistance to 



Agriculture, 582 

 Weber (Prof. Robert), on the Temperature Variation n{ the 



Thermal Conductivity of Rocks, 458 

 Wedensky (Prof), .Action of Electric Tetanisation im Nerve- 

 Muscle .Apparatus, 604 

 Weich,selbaum (Dr. .A.), the Elements of Pathological Histology, 



241 

 Weights and Measures, the Reform of our, 256 

 Weiler(Prof .A.), Planetary Perturbations, 629 

 Weiner (Otto), Colour Photography, 279 

 Weismann (Prof), Germinal Selection, 555 

 Weiss (Prof F. E. ), on a Supposed Case of .Symbiosis in Tctra- 



plodoit, 584 

 Weiss (P.), .Elotropic Magnetic Properties of Cry.stallised 



Magnetite, 303 

 Weldon (Prof W. F. R., F.R.S.), the Origin of the Cultivated 



Cineraria, 54, 103 

 Wells, (H. t;.), the Time Machine, 268: the Evergreen, a 



Northern Seasonal, 410 

 Weston ( Rev. W. ), on his Explorations in the Japanese Alps, 



563 

 Wetzler (Jo.seph), the Growth of Electric Railways in the 



United .States, 43 

 Wharton (Admiral W.J. L., F.R.S.), Deep Sounding in the 



Pacific, 550 

 Wheel, Gyroscopic Properties of, Killingworth Hedges, 181 

 Wheeler (E. S.), Relative Densities of Terrestrial Planets, 37 



Wheeler (W. H.), on the Effect of Wind and Atmospheric 

 Pressure on the Tides, 582 



Whetham (W. C. D.), Velocities of Ions, 286 



Whipple (G. C. ), Growth of Diatoms in Surface Waters, H2 ; 

 the Thermophone, 308 



Wliitaker (W., F.R.S.), Opening Address in Section C of the 

 British Association ; Underground in Suffolk and its Borders, 

 490 ; on the .Succession of Rocks Revealed by the Experi- 

 mental Boring at Stutton, 560 



White (A. Silva), Sir Samuel Baker, a Memoir, 409 



White (Chas. A.), the Relation of Biology to Geological Investi- 

 gation, 258, 279 



White ( R. B. ), on Various Deposits in Colombia, New Gr.inada, 



559 

 White (Sir William), Wood and Copper Sheathing for Steel 



Ships, 207 

 Whymper (E. ), some High Mountain Observatories, 513 

 Wiede (O. F. ), New Series of Iron Nitroso-ComiX)unds, 61 

 Wiedemann (E. ), Luminescence, 94 ; Luminescence of Organic 



Substances in the Three States, 611 

 Wiedemann's Annalen. 94, 189, 308, 382, 539, 611 

 Wiggin (H. A.), Nickel Steel, 428 

 Wilderniann (Dr. M.), on Physical Chemistry, 53S 

 W'ilkomm (Moritz), Death of, 577 

 Williams (Hamilton), Britain's Naval Power, 173 

 Williams (Stanley), the Rotation of .Saturn, 232 

 Williamson (W. C, F. R.S.), Fossil Plants of Coal Measures, 



238 



Williamson (Dr. W. C), Death of, 200; Obituary Notice of. 

 Count Solms-Laubach, 441 



Willis (J. C. ), on Cross- and Self- Fertilisation, with SjTecial 

 Reference to Pollen Prepotency, 585 



Wilson (C. T. R. ), Cloud-Formation in Absence of Dust, 144 



Wilson (E.), Alternate Current Dynamo-Electric Machines, 

 141 



Wilson (Sir Samuel), Death of, 152 



Wilson (W'. E. ), Effect of Surrounding Gas Pressure on Tem- 

 peratures of Arc-Light Crater, 238 



Wind-pressure, Prof. W. C. Kernot, 66 



Windle (Dr. Bertram), Effects of Electricity and Magnetism on 

 Development, 10 



Winkler (Mr. ), the Bacterial Contents of Margarine, 230 



Witmeur (Prof^, H.), Death of, 325 



Witz (.A.), Lightning by Luminescence, 383 



Woburn Experimental Fruit Farm, the, 50S 



Wolfer (Dr. -A.), .Sun-spot Observations in 1894, 629 



Woodward (C. J.), a Lecture Experiment, 5 



W'oodward (Dr. Henry, F.R..S.), the Life-History of the 

 Cnistacea in Early Palaeozoic Times, 114 



Wooflward (H. B. ), on a Section Recently Exposed by Denuda- 

 tion at the North Cliff, .Southwold, 559 



Wouldham, Roman Mithraeum at, 181 



Wragge (C. L.), Investigations of Ocean Currents by means of 

 Bottles, 66 



Wright (J.), (larden Flowers and Plants, 26S 



Vabe (Mr.), the Organisms responsible for pro<luction of Sake, 



601 

 Vale University, the Observatory of. Dr. W. L. Klkin, 375 

 Yeast, Sake, Messrs. Kosai and Vabe, 601 

 Yeasts, Moulds and, the Morphology of, Dr. Jfirgensen, 397 

 Yeasts, Transformation of Moulds into, R. W. Atkinson, 438 ; 



the Writer of the Note, 438 

 Verkes (Jbservator)-, the, 203 

 Yorkshire Naturalists' Union, the, 60 

 Young (C. A.), the 40265 Line and Dj, 45S 

 Young (C;.), .Action of Benzaldchyde on Phenylsemicarbazide, 



215 



(Prof.), Fruit best grown under Clear Cilass, 

 ), Three New Vibrios from Polluted Well-water, 



Zacharewiez 



486 

 Zawadski (.A. 



305 

 Zehnder (L.), the Motion of the Ether, 153 

 Zeitschrift fiir Wissenschaftliche Zoologie, 70 

 Zenger (C. \'. ), Storms and Earthquakes in Austria during June, 



432 ; the Ellipsoidal Stethoscope, 456 

 Zermatt, Earthquake .it, 418 



