SupfiUment to Nnturt, I 

 Awtv//^fr 2y, 1894 J 



Index 



XVII 



investigating the causation of the Gaiseous Interchange between 



the Blood and Air of the Lungs, 461 

 Frena Camera, the, 229 

 I'rench (C). Handbook of the Destructive Insects of 



Victoria, 243 

 Kriedel (C), Composition of Apophyllite, 167 

 Krog, an Intelligence of the, Kuoiagusu Minakata, 79 

 Kroggatt ("vV. \V.), New Wasps' Nest Mite {Hcleropes 



alastoi ()> 288 

 Fromm (O. ), the formation of Floating Metallic Films by 



Electrolysis, 21 

 Fromme (Carl), Mignetic Experimental Investigations, 635 

 Fruit Culture for Proht, C. B. Whitehead, 569 

 Frye (A. E.), Primary Geography, 473 

 Fulton (Dr. T. Wemyss), the Hatchery for Sea Fishes at 



Dunbar, 18 

 Funeral Rites in Madagascar, Antony Jully, 490 

 Fungi, the Earliest Mention of Diclyophora, Kumagusu 



Minakata, 54 

 Fur and Feather Series — the Grouse, Rev. H. A. Macpherson, 



A. J. Stuart- Wortley and George Saintsbury, 546 

 Fuss (W. E.), Award of the Count Lutke Medal to, for his Re- 

 searches on Chronometers, 360 



Gadow (Dr. H. F.R.S. ), on the Evolution of the Vertebral 



Column of Fishes, 516 

 Gaisford (H.), Elementary Lessonsjin SteamSMachinery and the 



Marine Engine, 220 

 Gale's Cornel 36, Elements and Ephemeris of, iS ; Ephemeris 



of. Prof. Kreutz, 87, iSi 

 Gall Flies, Dr Adier's Observations on, 545 

 Galle (Dr. J. G. ), Verzeichniss der Elemente der bisher berech- 



neten Cometenbahnen, 473 

 Gallic Eooch, Pottery of the, Octave Vauvilk', 490 

 Galtier (V.), New Researches on Association among Bacteria, 



48 

 Gallon (Francis, F.R.S. ), the Relative Sensitivity of Men and 



Women at the Nape of the Neck, 40 

 Garda, Lake, Bathyme'rical Survey of. Prof. Richter, 5S1 

 Gardner (y. A.), Chlorocamphene, 22 

 Garhwal Landslip, the, 35, 109, 231, 250, 393, 428, 501 ; R. 



Strachey, F. R S., 124; Dr. W. T. Blandford, F.R.S., 596 

 Garnett (H. ), a White Swallow. 481 

 Garstang (W. ), on the Ancestry ol the Chordata, 434 

 Gas, Lighting, in Argand and Auer Burners, Comparison of 



Combustion Products of, N. Gic lant, 287 

 Gas Engineering : Death of Alfred Williams, 304 

 Gas, the Densiiy o( Nitrogen, Lord Rayleigh, Sec. R S. 157 

 Gas, on ihe Existence of a New, in the Atmosphere, Lord 



Rayleigh, F.R.S., and Prof. Ramsay, 410 

 Gases ; Specific Heat of Carbon Dioxide at Constant Volume, 



Dr. J. Joly, F.R.S., 92 ; Experiments illustrating the Con- 

 nection between Chemical Change and Electrical Discharge 



through Gases, Prof. J. J. Thomson, 409 ; Specific Heat of 



Gases at Con~iant Pressure, Dr. .Silvio Lussana, 503 

 Ga'iselin (M.), New Boron Compounds containing Fluorine anc 



Alcohol Radicles, 530 

 Gaule (Prof.), Microscopic Specimens and .Slides illustrating the 



Remarkable Changes observed as following the .Secti'jn in the 



Rabbit of the Inferior Cervical Sympathetic Ganglion or its 



Branches, 461 

 Gauss's Plate, the best Position of a, 15. Waller, 431 

 Gebbardt (Dr.), an Electric Light Bath, 431 

 Geikie (Sir .Vrchibald, F.R.S.), Banded Gabbros in Skye, 190 ; 



on the Banded Structure of the Oldest Gneisses and Tertiary 



Gabbros, 510 

 Geitel (Dr. H.), Electro-Optical Experiments, 236; Pholo- 



Electric Phenomena, 451 

 Gelatine, Experiment made on a Dog as to the Nutritive Value 



of. Dr. J. Munk, 335 

 Geley (Gustave), Peripheric .Applications of Alkaloids in the 



Treatment ot Acute Maladies with Cutaneous Determination, 



396 

 Geneva, International Congress of Orientalists at, 454 

 Geneva, on Spring Rains in, 475 

 Geodesy : Meteorology and Geodesy, Prof. C. Abbe, 141 ; 



Death of Prof. Fischer, 153 ; Meeting of the Association 



Gcodesique Internationale at Innsbruck, 454 ; Geodesy and 



its Relalious with Geology, II. Faye, 564 



Geography: the Bakhliari Mountains and Upper Elam, Lieut. - 

 Col. Sawyer, 34 ; the Arctic Expeditions of 1894, Dr. Hugh 

 Robert Mill, 57 ; the Horn Expedition for the Scientific 

 Exploration of Central Australia, 174 ; Return of the, 528; 

 the Wellman Arctic Expedition, 273, 304. 360, 393 ; Atlas 

 of French Lakes, Andre Dclcbccque, 62 ; Mr. II. G. 

 Bryant's Journey in Labrador, 85 ; the Great Globe — First 

 Lessons in Geography, A. Seeley, loi ; Influence of Ancient 

 Village Communities on Map of England, H. T. Crofton, 

 no; Anniversary Meeting of the Royal Geographical 

 Society, 113; Timbuktu, 154; Climbing and Kxpluialion in 

 the Karakoram-Himalayas, William M.irtin Conway, 

 F.S.A., 199; Kafiristan, Surgeon Major G. S. Robertson, 

 211; the Cultivable Land on Kilimanjaro, Dr. Brehme, 

 305 ; Prof. J A. C. Oudemans on the Geographical Position 

 of the Astronomical Observatory at Utrechi, 312; Biskra 

 and the Oases and Desert of ihe Z^bans, Alfred E. Pease, 

 317; Award of the Constantine .\f<;dal to Prof. A. N. 

 Veselovsky for his Studies on Folk-lore, 360; Opening 

 Address in Section E of the British Association by Capt. 

 W. J. L. Wharton, F R.S., 377; on the Orography of the 

 Nang Shan, V. AI. Obruchcff, 432 ; on the 'I'undras of 

 North-East Russia, G. I. Tanfiliefl, 432 ; Annual Report ol 

 Russian Geographical Society, 456 ; East Siberia, P. P. 

 Semenoff, I. D. Cherskv and G. G. von Petz, 471 ; 

 Primary Geography, A. E. Frye, 473 ; Normal Line of 

 Separation between East and West ol the Ancient World, 

 Elisee Reclus, 583 ; Recent Explorations in British New 

 Guinea, 609 ; La Geographic li'lorale, Jules Girard, 615 



Geology: on some Sources of E'ror in the Siudy of Drift, 

 Prof. T. McKenny Hughes, F.R.S., 5 ; Geologists' Associa- 

 tion — Proposed Excursions, 13 ; Geological Society, 22, 70, 

 92, 166, 190, 285 ; Mesozoic Rocks and Cry-talline Schists 

 in Lepontme Alps, Prof. T. G. Bonney, F.R.S., 22 : Ein 

 Geologischer Querschnitt durch die Ost Aljien, A. Roth- 

 pletz, Dr. Maria M. Ogilvie, 27 ; the Newer Liierature of 

 the Alpine Trias, Dr. A. Biitner, 2S3 ; M. Bertrand on the 

 Struciure of the French Alps, 510 ; with Prof. Heim in the 

 Eastern Alps, 526 ; on the Calcareous Tuffs of the Col de 

 Lauterel (Hautes Alpes), W. Kilian. 588 ; the Glacial 

 System of the Alps, B. Hobson, 602 ; Piof. Suess on the 

 Southern and Norihern Alp--, 510; Igneous Rocks on 

 Western Flank of Dartmoor, Lieut. Gen. C. A. McMahon, 

 23; the Bhaganwala Coal-Field of the Salt Range, T. D, 

 la louche, 34 ; the Echiaoidea of Cutch, Dr. J. W. Gregory, 

 35 ; the Landslip at Gohna Garwhal, 35, 109, 231, 250,393, 

 428, SOI ; R. Str.achey, F.R.S., 124; Dr. W. T. Biandlord, 

 F.R.S., 596; a Manual of the Geology ol India, R. D.Oldham, 

 52; the Niagara River as a Geologic Chronometer, Prof. G. K. 

 Gilbert, 53; Niag.ira Falls as a Chronometer of Geological 

 Time, Prof. J. W. Spencer, 237 ; Niagara River since the Ice 

 Age, Prof. Warren Upham, 198 ; Time Gauge of Niagara, 

 Thos. W. Kingsmill, 338; the Age o( Niagara Falls, Prof. 

 Spencer, 486 ; the Scandinavian Ice Sheet, Victor Madsen, 

 54; the North Sea Ice Sheet, Sir Henry H. How..rth, 

 F.R.S., 79; the Geology of Mashonaland, A. R. Sawyer, 

 70 ; Thames Valley Beds and Boulder Clay, T. V. Holmes, 

 70; Pleistocene Deposits at Twickenham, Dr. J. K. Leeson 

 and G. B. LalTan, 70 ; New Goniaiite from Lower Coal 

 Measures, Hert>ert Bolton, 70; the Carrock Fell Gabbro, 

 Alfred Harker, 92 ; Banded Gabbros in Skye, Sir Archibald 

 Geikie, F.R.S., and J. J. H. Teall, F.R.S., 190; Sir. A. 

 Geikie, F.R.S., on the B inded Siructure of the Oldest 

 Gneisses and Tertiary Gabbros, 510 : Relation of Granite to 

 Gabbro of Barnavave, Carlinglird, Prof. W. J. Sollas, 

 F.K.S., 252; the Geology of Monte Chaberton, .\. M. 

 Daviesand Dr. J. W. Gregory, 92 ; Monograph of th*: Stalac- 

 tites and Stalagmites of the Cleaves Cove, nea- Dairy, Ayr- 

 shire, John Smith, 100 ; Economic Geology of the United 

 Slates, with briefer mention of Foreign Mineral Products, 

 Ralph S. Tarr, 145 ; Stratigraphy and Physiography of 

 Libyan Desert of Egypt, Capt. 11. G. Lyons, 166; Geology 

 of Soulh Africa, D. Draper, 167; Occurrence of Diiomite 

 in South Africa, D. Draper, 167 ; Geology of British East 

 Africa, Dr. J. W. Gregory, 167 ; Geology, Charles Bird, 171 ; 

 the Recent Discovery of Fossil Remains at Lake Calabonna, 

 Dr. E. C. Stirling, F.R.S., 1S4, 206; Magnetic Rock, S. 

 Skinner, 191 ; Derbyshire Carboniferous Doleriies and Tuffs, 

 II. II. Arnold-Bemrose, 190; Origin of Permian Breccias 

 of Midlands, R. D. Oldham, 190 ; some Fossils from the 



