IV 



Indi 



ix 



tSiipftemrttt to ^atii*t 

 November 7% T894 



Dr. BrintoD, 487 ; Salt in Savagery, F. H. Gushing, 487 ; 

 Ears of Corn from Prehistoric Grains, W. Slurtevant, 4SS; 

 Indexing ofChemical Literature, 539 ; Aftiliated Societies of 

 the American Association for the Advar.cement of Science, 

 608; the EfTect of Glacialion and of ihc Glacial Period on 

 the Present Fauna of Norih America, Samuel H. Scudder, 

 515 ; on the Keproduciive Habits of the American Lobster, 

 F. H. Herrick, 553; Xorlh American Molhs, Dr. John B. 

 Smith, W. F. Kirby, 619 ; on ihe Arachnid Affinities of the 

 American King-Crab Limiilus, 621 

 AmphioxDS, Johannes Miiller and, 54 

 Amsterdam Royal Academy of Sciences, 24, 144, 240, 311 

 Am-thesia, Dr. W. T. G. Morton's Claims to the Discovery 



of, L. Snell, 420 

 Anatomy : Anatomy of Dumb-bell Shaped Bone in Ornilho- 

 rhynchus, Prof. J. T. Wilson, 96 ; External Anatomy of the 

 Chinese Brain, C. H. Bond, III ; the Presternal Muscle, O. 

 Lambert, 490 

 Ancient Astronomy, Paul Tannery, 265 

 Andromeda, the Great Nebula in, C. Easlon, 547 

 Animal, the, as a Machine and a Prime Motor and the Laws of 



Energetics, R. H. Thurston, 474 

 Animal Variation ; Materials for the .Study of Variation, treated 

 with especial regard to Discontinuity in the Origin of 

 Species, \V. Bateson, Prof. \V. F. R. Weldon, F.R.S., 25 

 Annalen desK. K. Nalurhistorischen Hofmuseuuis, 21 

 Annals of the Russian Geographical .Society, 621 

 Anthropology: Morphological Peculiarities in Natives of Panjab, 

 Prof. R. M. Charles, 16 ; Prehistoric Remains in Florida, 

 Dr. De \V. Webb, 16 ; Bulletins de la Socicic d .\nthro- 

 pologie de Pari?, 21, 441, 490 ; Mcmoires de la Socio e 

 d'Anthropologie de Paris, 441 ; the Natives of Lifou, 

 J. Deniker, 21 ; L'.\nthropologie, 91, 490; Note» for His- 

 tory of Primitive Art, Ed. Pielto, 91 ; the Female Deity and 

 Sculptures of the Allee Couverte of Kpone, E. Carlailhac, 

 91 ; the Hamites of Eastern Africa, Maurice Delafosse, 91 ; 

 Probable Age of Swiss Lacustrine Stations, E. Vouga, 91 ; 

 the Yoruba-Speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast of West 

 Africa, Colonel A. B. Ellis, 221 ; Among the Tarahumari*:, 

 Dr. Carl Lumholtz, 234 ; Supposed Aboriginal Hoe, R. 

 Elheridge, 239 ; Opening Address in Section H of the 

 British Association by Sir W. If. Flower, F.R.S., 3S7 ; the 

 Poisoned Arrows of the Akas, Prof. L. A. Waddell, 39S ; 

 on the Various Forms of the Teeth of DifTerent Races, Dr. 

 F. Rcgnaull. 441 ; Rccherches Ethnologiqucs sur le Morvan, 

 Ab. Hovelacque and Georges llcrvc, 441 ; the .Anthropology 

 of France, Dr. R. Collignon, 441 ; .Monument erected in 

 honour of Armand de Quatrcfages, 481 ; Dr. Frank lioaz on 

 Human Faculty as determined by Race, 487 ; Variations in 

 the Human Skeleton and their Causes, Dr. Daniel G. Brinto.i, 

 487 ; Salt in Savagery, F. H. Gushing, 487 ; Photographs of 

 Ihe Inhabitants of the Mergui Islands (the Selungs), 490 ; 

 Prehistoric Crania of Patagonia, Dr. R. Verneau, 490; Pot- 

 tery of the Gallic Epoch, Octave Vauvillc, 490 ; Funeral Rites 

 in Madagascar, Antony Jully, 490 ; Instinctive Attitudes, 

 Hiram .M. Stanley, 596 ; R. Elheridge on the Kuditcha Shoes 

 of Central Au-tralia, 636 (See also Section H of the British 

 Association) 

 AnlhroiKimetrical System of Ideniificilion used in Bengal, 326 

 Anthropomclrical System of Measurement of Criminals to be 



adopted in England, 481 

 Anthropometry : Incomparabilily of Nasal Indices derived 

 from Mea.surcmcnts of the Living Head with those deduced 

 from Objervation of Skulls, Dr. R. Havelock Charles, 482 

 Anti-Vivisectionists, the. Dr. Louis Robinson, 234 

 Anli-Vivisectionitti and Patteur's Anii-Rabic Treatment, 



the, 14 

 Antigua, Drought at, C. A. Barber, 475 



Anlil'ixic I'ropctlics of Ihe Blood of Ihc Terrestrial Salamander 

 (Sal.immdra maculosa) against Curare, on some, C. Phisalix 

 and Ch. Contcjcan, 444 

 Apis Period of the Ancient Egyptian", Ihe, Dr. E. Mahler, 254 

 Applcyard (Rollo), Dielectrics, 93 

 April. Rprrni rhange in the Character of, 246 ; Dr. O. Z. 



" i at Turin, on Ihc, 393 



Ara r.iiion of Ihe Hadramui, J, T. Bent, 90 



Arac. Ml,,,,;, ,if the American King-crab Limulus, on 



Ihe, 621 

 Ararat, Thcrmometric ObicrvAtions on Ihe Summit of, M. 

 Venukoff, 588 



Archseology : Death of Sir Henry Layaid, 250 ) 



Archicof/eryx, on the Wing of, viewed in Ihe light of that ol 

 some Modern Birds, W. P. Pjcrafi, 435 t 



Archoplasm, the, and Altraciion Sphere, J. E. S. Moore, 47S 



Arctic and Antarctic Marine Fauna, Dr. John Murray, 443 



.\rctic Exploration : the Arctic Expeditions of 1894, Dr. 

 Hugh Robert Mill, 57 ; flow I discovered the North Pole, 

 J. Munro, 140 ; the Peary Expedition, 581 ; .Sailing of the 

 Peary Auxiliary Expedition, 250; Letter from Lieut Peary, 

 603 ; Two Arctic Expeditions in one Day, Dr. W. H. Hale, 

 296 ; Wellman Arctic Expedition, 273, 304 ; News of the, 

 360 : Supplies for the Wellman Expedition, 393 ; Cook's 

 Greenland Expedition, 429 ; keiurn of Dr. Cook's Arctic 

 Expedition, 481 ; Death of Sir Edward Augustus Inglefield, 

 F.R.S , 480; the lViria'7i'arJ Expedition, 603 ; Ihe Trevor- 

 Battye Expedition, 603 



.Vrctowski (H.), Properties of Carbon Bisulphide, 165; Solu- 

 bilities of Haloid Salts of Mercury in Carbon Bisulphide, 165 



Arctowski (Prof.), Mode of Convening Oxide of Iron into 

 Haematite Crystals, 306 



Arizona, the Lowell Oliservalory, John Ritchie, jun. , 149 



Arkansas, Tornado at Little Rock, 580 



Arloing (S.), Ihe Microbe of Contagious Peripneumonia in 

 Cattle, 287 



Armstrong (Dr. H. E., F.R.S.), on the Publication of Scientific 

 Literature, 159; Scientific Education and Research, 211 : 

 Scientific Method in Board Schools, 631 



Army Examinations, the Report of the Committee on, 125 



Army Regulations, New, Rev. Dr. A. Irving, 245 



Arno (Riccardo), New Electrical Rotation Experiment, 155 



Arnold (Prof. J. O. ), Physicil Influence of certain Elements on 

 Iron, 38 ; Conditions in which Carbon Exists in Slcel, 143 



Arnold-Uenirosc(H. II.), Derbyshire Carboniferous Dolerites 

 and TufTs, 190 



-Arrows, the Poisoned, of the Akas, Prof. L. A. Waddell, 395 



Articulates, Derivation and Homologies of, J. D. Dai a, 91 



Ascent of Man, the Lowell Lectures on the, Henry Drummond, 

 147 ; Mrs. Lynn Linion, 4S9 



Ascoli (M.), on the Radial Distribution of the Induced 

 Magnetism in an Iron C) Under, 604 



Asia, " Killer's," Russian Addenda, P. P. ScmenofT, I. D. 

 Cherskyand G. G. Von Petz, 471 



Aspects of Modern Study, R. A. Gregory, 422 



Asleriiiagililiosa, Variations in Larva of, E. \V. Mac Bride, 143 



Aslerina gibbosa, the Depjsition of Ova by, Ilcnry Scherren, 

 246 



Asteroids, the Mass of the, B. M. Roszel, 87 



A^tor (John Jacob), a Journey in Other Worlds, R. A. Gregory, 

 592 



Astrology: a Treatise of Natal Astrology, G. Wilde and J. 

 Dodson ; the .Soul and Ihe Stars, A. G. Trench, 219 ; Sludieii 

 iiber Claudius Ptolcmlius, ein Heilrag zur Geschichle der 

 gricchischcn Philosophic und Astrologie, Franz Boll, 398 



Astronomy: an Astronomical Expedition from Harvard, 18; 

 Our. Astronomical Column, 18, 36, 64, 87, 113, 132, 157, i8r, 

 206, 230, 254, 277, 307, 327, 364, 395, 416, 433. 457, 484, 

 504, 531, 556, 583, 606, 623; Elements and Ephcm^'ris of 

 Gale's Gomel, 18, 36 ; Prof. Kreuiz, 87, iSi ; the Planet 

 Saturn, 32 ; the Moon's Apparent Diameter, M. P. Stroobant, 

 36 ; Dcnning's Comet, M. L- Schulhof, 37 ; Stars having 

 Peculiar Spectra, Mrs. Fleming, 37 ; I'rincipia Nova Asir >- 

 nomica, Ilcnry Pratt, 51 ; Fin ler Circles for Equalorials, 64; 

 Harvatd Observatory in Peru, Prof. W. H. Pickering, 64 ; 

 Diameters of some Minor Planets, Prof. K. E. Barnard, 65 ; 

 Retuin of Tempel's Comet, 65 ; Ephcmeris for Tempel's 

 Comet, 206 ; M. Schulhof, 113 ; Moon-Man or Moon-Maid, 

 William Canton, 66 ; Sunspoisan<l Weather, W. L. Dallas 

 1 13 : Sun-spot Observations m.ade at Lyons Oi)servatory dur- 

 ing first quarter of 1894, J. Guillaumc, 143 ; the First 

 Observation of Sun-spots, Prof. E. Millesuvich, 230 ; Sun-spot 

 Observations at Ihe Potsdam Observatory, 556 ; on the 

 Rotation of Solar Spots, M. Flammarion, 564 ; Recent 

 Observations of Jupiter's Satellites, Dr. E. S. Holdcn, 87; 

 Jupiter's S,alctlilcs in 1664, Frank H. Clutz, 1 13 ; the Di^cs 

 of Jupiter's Satellites, Prof. Harnard and Prof, Pickering, 

 W.J. S. Lnckycr, 320; the Mass of Jupiter, Prof. .Simon 

 Newcomli, 458 ; on the Eccentricity of the Orbit of Jupiter's 

 l''iflh Satellite, M. F. Tisserand, 612 ; the Fifth Satillile of 

 Jupiter, Prof. E. E. Barnard, 624 ; the Mass of Ihc Asteroids, 

 B. M. Roszel, 87 ; Results obtained with Prismatic Camera 



