SjippUtiicHt to Xatnre^'\ 

 Dcceti:ber 5, 1895 J 



Index 



xi 



iJerivatives of Benzoquinone, Ch. Astre, 660 ; Toxicity of 



Acetylene, N. CIrchant, 660 

 Cheron (Jules), Instantaneous Hyperglobulia by Peripheric 



Stimulation, 383 

 Cherskiy (I. D. ) and G. G. von Petz, P. P. Semenoff, Eastern 



Siberia, 541 

 Chicago University, the New, Mr. Herrick, 586 

 Chimpanzee, a Brown, Dr. A. P. Meyer, 653 

 Cliina : the Zi-ka-\Vei Observatory, 180 ; Scientific Knowledge 



(if the Ancient Chinese, 622 

 Cholera, Dr. Haflliine's Indian Kxpericnces in Inoculation 



against, 1 1 1 

 Chorisis in I'lowers, Dr. Celavosky, 231 

 Christy (Miller), the " Deneholes " of Essex and Kent, 44 

 Chromo.scopc, Betts's, 178 

 Cinelli (Dr. M.), Records of Vicentini (.Siena) Micioseismo- 



graph, July-October 1894, 152 

 Cineraria. Origin of the Cultivated, W. T. Thiselton-Dyer, 



F.R.S., 3, 78, 188; W. Bateson, 29, 103; Prof. W. K. R. 



.R.S. 



54, It 

 llalley': 



'j> 



Weldon, 1- 

 ER.S., 54 

 Clarke (Charles L, 



343 

 Classical Antiquities, Atlas of, Th. Schreiber, 100 

 Clausius' \'irial Theorem, Col. C. V,. Basevi, 413; Prof. A. 



A. Gray, 568; S. H. Burhury, E. U.S., 568; Robert E. 



Hayncs, 569 

 Claypole (Prof.) on some Whole Specimens of Cladodonts from 



the Devonian Rocks of Ohio, 560 ; the Oldest Vertebrate 



l'os.sil, 55 

 Clayton (II. Helm), a Cyclonic Indraught at the Top of an 



.\nticyclone, 243 ; Relation of Clouds to Rainfall, 455 

 Clcghoni (Dr.), Death of, 82 

 Cleveite, on the Constituents of the Gas in. Prof. C. Runge and 



Prof Paschen, 520 

 Climates and Baths of Great Britain, 566 

 Climates of the Geological Past, and their Relation to the 



Evolution of the Sun, Th. Eug. Dubois, 436 

 Climbing in the British Isles, \V. P. Ilaskelt Smhh and II. C. 



Hart, 617 

 Clodd (Edward), a Primer of I" volution, 26; the Story of 



Primitive Man, 173 

 CIoud-Bursls of 1872, Effects of Coo.sa (Alabama), A. M. Gibson. 



552' . 



Cloud formation. Phenomena of, \\ . N. Shaw, 39 



Clowes (Prof.), on Further Experiments on the Respirability of 



-Vir, in which a Candle Flame has Burnt till it is extinguished, 



537 

 Cluster, the Pnvsepe, Dr. Wilhelm Schur, 515 

 Coal-Shipping System, Lewis and Hunter, 180 

 Coast Erosion, the British Association Committee on, Charles 



E. de Ranee, 597 

 Cockerell (Prof. T. D. A.), Alterations in the Colours of 



Flowers liy Cyanide Ftmies, 520 

 Cod and Temperature, the, Lieut. C. Gade, 231 

 Crelostat, the, 399 ; E. Lippmann, 9O 



Cohen (J. B. ), Slethod of Preparing Formyl Derivatives of Aro- 

 matic .Vmines, 312 : a Modification of Zincke's Reaction, 312 ; 

 Method of Preparing Cyanuric .\cid, 312 

 Culm (Prof. Fred.), the {iold -Medal of the Linnean Society 



awarded to, 1 10 

 Cohnsteiu (Dr.), Experiments in Sugar- Inject ion into Blood- 

 Vessels, 336 

 Collet (Prof. R ), the Migrations of th 

 Collie (Dr. J. Norman), Helium, ; 



Minerals, 306, 311, 33 1 

 Colliery Explosions: Report upon the Timsbury Colliery Ex- 

 jilosion of February 1895, J. Roskill and J. S. Martin, 

 302 

 Collins (F. Howard), the Examination Curve, 30; Do the Coni- 

 jionents of Compound Colours in Nature follow a Law of 

 Multiple Proportion ? 438 

 Colour Photography, Dr. J. Joly, 1S2 : Otto W'einer, 279 

 Colour Relations of.Vtoms, Ions, and .Molecules, I., M. C. Lea, 



118 

 Colour Standards, a .Scheme of, J. H. Pillsbury, 390 ; Mr. 



Pillsbury and J. W. Lovibond, 577 

 Colours, the Nomenclature of, Herbert Spencer, 413 

 Colours : Do the Components of Compound Colours in Nature 

 follow a Law of Multiple Proportion ? F. Howard Collins, 

 438: Joseph \V. Lovibond, I'lof. J. McKeen Cattell, 547 



Lemming, 64 

 Constituent of 



29 ; W. Botting Hemsley, 

 Chart of .Magnetic Declinations, 



Colours of Flowers by Cyanide Fumes, Alterations in the, Prof. 



T. D. A. Cockerell, 520 

 Colours of .Mother-o'-Pearl, C. E. Benhani, 619 

 Columbian Museum, the Field, 137 



Comets : the Orbit of Comet 1893 IV. (Brooks'). Signor Peyra, 

 37 ; Comet 1S92 \'. (Barnard), J. G. Porter, J. Coniel, 155 ; 

 Ephemeris for Barnard's Comet 1884 II., Dr. Berberich, 327 ; 

 Reappearance of Swift's Comet, 421 ; Ephemeris of Swift'.s 

 Comet, 446 ; Comet, Swift's (August 20, 1895), ^- Le Cadet, 

 456 ; Elements and Ephemeris of Comet a, 1895 (Swift), Dr. 

 Berberich, 553: Comets and the Sun-siX)t Period, Herr J. 

 Unterweger, 446 : Return of Faye's Comet, 553 ; Ephemeris 

 for Faye's Comet, 603; Holmes' Comet, Dr. II. J. Zwiers, 

 629 

 Comstock (Prof. E. C. ), Atmospheric Refractions, 399 

 Comstock (Prof. John Henry) and Anna Botsford Comstock, 



a Manual for the Study of Insects, 337 

 Congress, International Geographical, 329, 350 

 Coniel (J.) Comet 1892 V. (Barnard), 155 

 Conroy (Sir John, Bart, F.R.S.), Refractive Index of Water 



between 0° and 10', 455 

 Consciousness and Evolution, Prof. Mark Baldwin, 627 

 Contemporary Review, -Science in, 257, 356, 450, 586 

 Coavex Mirror, to Find the Focal Length of a, Edwin Budden,. 



366 

 Conwentz (Dr.) on Engli.sh Amber, 585 

 Cook Collections of South Sea Island Weapons, &c.. Dr. A'. 



Ball, II 

 Cookery, the Spirit of, a Popular Treatise on the History, 

 Science, Practice, and Ethical and Medical Import of Culinary 

 Art, Dr. J. L. W. 'I'hudichum, 97 

 Cooper (Arthur), Metal .Mixer, 62 

 Cope (Prof. E. D. ), Cyphornis, 524 

 Corals : Variations in Large Masses of Turbinaria, Prof. JeftVey 



Bell, II 

 Cornish (C. L), Wild England of To-day, and the Wild Life in 

 . it, 589 



Cornu (A.), Transverse Vibrations of Cords, 382 

 Cotton (A.), Unequal Ab.sorption of Dextro- and Lpevo- 

 Rotatory Circularly Polarised Light in certain Active 

 Substances, 71 

 Coulter (J. .M.), Botanical Work of.Vinerican Government, 251 

 Counter-Irritation, the Theory and Practice of, H. Cameron 



(Jillies, 615 

 Cowper (H. Swainson) on the Senanis, or Megalithic Monu- 

 ments of Tripoli, 580 

 Craigie (P. t;.), .Agricultural Education in the United Slates, 84 

 Craters of the .Moon, the, 579 



Creak (Captain Ettrick W., F.R.S.), some Bibliological Dis- 

 coveries in Terrestrial Magnetism, 129 ; the Earliest Magnetic 

 Meridians, 295 

 Crismer (L. ), .Application lo General -Vnaly.sis of Critical 



Solution-Temperature, 611 

 Crcniptons (R. E. ), Electrical Heating Apparatus, 37 

 Crookes (W. , F. U.S.), the .Spectrum of Helium, 42S 

 Cross (C. F. ), on the Chemical History of the Barley Plant, 53S 

 Crustacea, the Life-History of the, in Early Pahvozoic Times, 



Dr. Henry Woodward, 114 

 Crystal-Cutting, &c. , .Vpparatus, \. E. Tutton, iSi 

 Crystalline Rocks. Boring for Water in, 486 

 Crystallography : Crystallography, a Treatise on the Morpho- 

 logy of Crystals, N. Story-Maskelyne, F. R.S., 11. A. Miers, 

 145 ; Number of Forms of Regular System in Ciiven Space, 

 Prof. Schoute, 168; an Introduction to Chemical Cry.slallo- 

 graphy, -Andreas Fock, 315 

 Cuckoo and its Eggs, the, W. C. J. Butterfield, 177 

 Culvcrwcll (Edward P.), Boltzmann's Minimum "Theorem, 149 

 Cundall ( 1'. ), on Recently Discovered Aboriginal Inhabitants of 



Jamaica, 607 

 Cunningham (Colonel), on Mer.senne's Numbers, 534 

 Cunningham (Prof. D. J., F.R.S.), the Brain ol the Micro- 

 cephalic Idiot, III 

 Cunningham (I. T. ), on Fi.sh and Fishing Grounds in the North. 



Sea, 562 

 Cure, a Rational, for -Snake-bite, 620 



Curie (P. ), .M.ignetic Properties of Bodies at Different Tempera- 

 tures, 134. 251 

 Curry (\V. T. ) and -Allen Greenwell, Rural Water Supply. 617 

 Curtis (R. H.), Hourly A'arialion of Sunshine in the British 



Isles, 215 

 Curve, the Examination, F. Howard Collins, 30 



