■u„c 8, 1905 J 



Index 



Apes, Craniology of Man and the Anthropoid, A. T. 



Mundy, 125 ; N. C. Macnamara, 125 

 S Aquila;, New Variable Stars in the Region about, Prof. 



Wolf, 519 

 Arachnidte : a Note on the Coloration of Spiders, Oswald 



H. Latter, 6 

 Arber (E. A. Newell), Palaeozoic Seed Plants, 68 ; 



Sporangium-like Organs of Glossopteris Browniana, 382 

 Arc Spectra of the Alkali Metals, F. A. Saunders, 133 

 Arc Spectra, the Appearance of Spark Lines in, Dr. Henry 



Crew, 159 

 ArchJEology : Recent Archseological Discoveries in Crete, 

 Proposed Chronology of Cretan Civilisation, S. Reinach, 

 69; "Find" of Royal Statues at Thebes, G. Legrain, 

 126 ; on an Ossiferous Cave of Pleistocene Age at Hoe 

 Grange Quarry, Longcliffe, near Brassington (Derbyshire), 

 H. H. Arnold Bemrose and E. T. Newton, F.R.S., 165, 

 48S ; Herculaneum and the Proposed International Ex- 

 cavation, Dr. Charles Waldstein, 182 ; Worked Flints 

 Discovered at Culmore, 208 ; Records of the Reign of 

 Tukulti-Ninib L, King of Assyria about B.C. 1275, L. W. 

 King, F.S.A., 222 ; Types of Stone Implements found in 

 Taaibosch Spruit, J. P. Johnson, 236 ; Notes on Stone- 

 henge. Sir Norman Lockyer, K.C.B., F.R.S., 297, 345, 

 36?! 391. 535 '• Question of Free Access to Stonehenge, 

 613 ; the Tombs of Minoan Knossos, A. J. Evans, 303 ; 

 Man and the Mammoth at the Quaternary Period in the 

 Soil of the Rue de Rennes, M. Capitan. 312; Remains 

 of the Prehistoric Age in England, Bertram C. A. 

 Windle, F.R.S., 322 ; Exploration at the Ancient British 

 Lake Village at Glastonbury, Prebendary Grant, 422 ; 

 Archseological Researches in Costa Rica, C. V. Hart- 

 man, Colonel George Earl Church, 461 ; Stone Imple- 

 ments in Darjeeling District, E. H. C. Walsh, 453 ; 

 Phaistos and Hagia Triada, Crete, 465 ; Discovery at 

 Boiron of a Tomb of the Bronze Age, F. A. Forel, 493 ; 

 North African Petroglyphs, E. F. Gautier, 570 ; 

 Stanton Drew, A. L. Lewis, 584 ; the Fort and Stone- 

 lined Pits at Inyanga Contrasted with the Great Zim- 

 babwe, R. N. Hall, 598 ; Neolithic Dewponds and Cattle- 

 ways, A. J. Hubbard and G. Hubbard, 611 

 Archebiosis and Heterogenesis, Dr. H. Charlton Bastian, 



F.R.S., 30 

 Archer (Mr.), the Salmon Fisheries of England and Wales, 



18 

 Architects, the Institution of Naval, 594 

 Arctica : Fate of Baron Toll's Expedition, 467 ; State of 



the Ice in the Arctic Seas during 1904, 567 

 Argon, the Discovery of. Prof. G. H. Darwin, F.R.S., 



83 ; the Translator, 102 

 Ari^s (E.), la Statique chimique bas^e sur les deux Prin- 



cipes fondamentaux de la Thermodynamique, 247 

 Arithmetic ; New School Arithmetic, Charles Pendlebury 

 and F. E. Robinson, 75 ; New School Examples in Arith- 

 metic, Charles Pendlebury and F. E. Robinson, 75 ; 

 Clive's Shilling Arithmetic, 507 

 Arkansas, Zinc and Lead Deposits of Northern, G. I. 



Adams, 450 

 Arnett (B.), the Elements of Geometry, Theoretical and 



Practical, 507 

 Arnold (Prof. J. O.), on the Occurrence of Widmann- 

 statten's Figures in Steel Castings, 32 ; Report of the 

 Commission appointed by Clifford Sifton, Minister of 

 the Interior, Ottawa, Canada, to investigate the 

 Different Electrothermic Processes for the smelting of 

 Iron Ores and the making of Steel in Europe, 258 

 Arnold (Robert Brandon), Scientific Fact and Metaphysical 



Reality, 485 

 Arnold-Bemrose (H. H.), an Ossiferous Pleistocene Cavern 



at Hoe Grange Quarry, 165, 48S 

 Arris and Gale Lectures on the Neurology of Vision, J. 



Herbert Parsons, 340 

 Artificial Production of Rubies bv Fusion, A. Verneuil, 



180 

 Artom (Alessandro), Wireless Telegraphy with Circular 



Waves, 517 

 Ascensions of 2120 Southern Stars, Right, Prof. W. 



Doberck, 545 

 Asia, the Species of Dalbergia of South-Eastern, Dr. D. 



Prain, 363 

 Asiatic Society of Bengal, 288, 336, 551 



Assyriology : Records of the Reign of Tukulti-Ninib I., 

 King of Assyria about B.C. 1275, L. W. King, F.S.A., 222 

 Astronomy : Our Astronomical Column, 16, 39, 63, 89, 114, 

 133. 15!^, 185, 211, 233, 256, 2S1, 306, 328, 353, 374, 400, 

 424, 449, 469, 494, 518, 544, 569, 592, 617 ; Astronomical 

 Occurrences in November, 16; in December, 114; in 

 January, 1905, 211; in February, 32S ; in March, 424; in 

 April, 518; in May, 617; Encke's Comet 1904 6, M. 

 Kaminsky, 16, 114; Prof. Max Wolf, 63, 89; Prof- 

 Millosevich, 89, 114; Prof. E. Hartwig, 89; Herr Mos- 

 chick, 114; Dr. Smart, 114; Herr van d Bilt, 185; 

 Brightness of Encke's Comet, J. Holetschek, 469 ; Simul- 

 taneous Occurrence of Solar and Magnetic Disturbances, 

 A. Nippoldt, 16 ; the Third Band of the Air Spectrum, 

 H. Deslandres and A. Kannapell, 17; the Coming Shower 

 of Leonids, W. F. Denning, 30 ; John R. Henry, 30 ; 

 Observations of the Leonid Meteors, 1904, W. H. Mil- 

 ligan, 83; Alphonso King, 102; John R. Henry, 126; 

 Mr. Denning, 353 ; Observations of Leonids at Harvard, 

 1904, 233 ; on the Occurrence of Widmannstiitten's 

 Figures in Steel Castings, Prof. J. O. Arnold and A. 

 McWilliam, 32; Death of Dr. Frank McClean, F.R.S., 

 36 ; Obituary Notice of, 58 ; Apparatus for Measuring the 

 Velocity of the Earth's Rotation, Prof. A. Fdppl, 39; 

 the Perseid Shower, .\. King, 40 ; Observations of 

 Perseids, M. Chretien, 89 ; M. Perrotin, 89 ; G. A. 

 Quignon, 89 ; Prof. S. Zammarchi, 133 ; V. Fournier, 

 A. Chaudot, and G. Fournier, 167 ; the Dumb-Bell 

 Nebula, Louis Rabourdin, 40; Harvard College Ob- 

 servatory ; Plan for the Endowment of Astronomical Re- 

 search, Prof. E. C. Pickering, 40 ; the Rotation of 

 Venus, P. Lowell, 47; the Rotation of Mars, P. Lowell, 

 47 ; Longitude Observations of Points on Mars, Mr. 

 Lowell, 449 ; Forthcoming Opposition of Mars, R. Bu- 

 chanan, 494 ; Reality of Various Features on Mars, V. 

 CeruUi, 592; Changes on Mars. Mr. Lowell, 618; Mr. 

 Lampland, t>i^ ; Prof. W. H. Pickering, 618; Seasonal 

 Development of Martian Canals, Mr. Lowell, 282 ; the 

 Alternating Variability of, Mr. Lowell, 494 : a Probable 

 Variable of the Algol Type, J. E. Gore, 55 ; Deslandres's 

 Formula for the Lines in the Oxygen Band Series, Prof. 

 Deslandres, 63 ; Annual Report of the Cape Observatory, 

 Sir David Gill, 63 ; the Transition from Primary to 

 Secondary Spectra, P. G. Nutting, 63 ; the Temperature 

 of Meteorites, H. E. Wimperis, 81 ; Heights of Meteors, 

 Mr. Denning, 89 ; the Photographic Spectrum of Jupiter, 

 G. MiUochau, 89 ; the Great Red Spot on Jupiter, Mr. 

 Denning and Rev. T. E. Phillips, 211 ; Stanley Williams, 

 211; Changes on the Surface of Jupiter. Prof. G. W. 

 Hough, 306 ; Discovery of a Sixth Satellite to Jupiter, 

 Prof. Perrine, 256, 2S2 ; the Reported Sixth Satellite of 

 Jupiter, Prof. Wolf, 306; Jupiter's Sixth Satellite, Prof. 

 Perrine, 329 ; Prof. C. A. Young, 364 ; Profs. Perrine and 

 Aitken, 494; Visual Observations of, Mr. Hammond, 569; 

 Reported Discovery of a Seventh Satellite to Jupiter, 424 ; 

 Jupiter's Seventh Satellite, Prof. Campbell, 440; Prof. 

 Perrine, 449 ; Rotation of Jupiter's Satellites I. and II., 

 Dr. P. Guthnick, 469 ; the November Meteors of 1904, 

 W. F. Denning, 93 ; Variations on the Moon's Surface, 

 Prof. W. H. Pickering, 114; a Possible Explanation of 

 the Formation of the Moon, George Romanes, 143 ; 

 Changes Upon the Moon's Surface, Prof. William H. 

 Pickering, 226 ; Origin of Lunar Formation, G. Romanes, 

 256 ; Dr. Johnston-Lavis. 256 ; Dr. G. K. Gilbert, 256 ; 

 Geology of the Moon, Sir Arch. Geikie, F.R.S., 348; 

 Observations of the Recent Eclipse of the Moon, M. 

 Puiseux, 518; Celestial Photography at High Altitudes, 

 Prof. Payne and Dr. H. C. Wilson, 114; Distribution of 

 Stellar Spectra, Mrs. Fleming, 115; Absorption by Water 

 Vapour in the Infra-red Solar Spectrum, F. E. Fowle, 

 jun., 115: Royal Astronomical Society, 118, 190, 311, 

 502, 622 ; Magnetic Disturbances, 1882 to 1903, and their 

 Association with Sun-spots, E. W. Maunder, 118; Re- 

 discovery of Tempel's Second Comet, M. Gavelle. 133 ; 

 J. Coniel, 133 ; Tempel's Comet (1904 c), M. St. Javelle, 

 185 ; M. Coniel, 185 ; Ephemeris for, J. Coniel, 282 ; 

 Search-Ephemeris for Tempel's First Periodic Comet 

 (1867 II.), A. Gautier, 545 ; Parallax of a Low Meteor, 

 P. Gdtz, 133 ; Date of the Most Recent Sun-spot Mini- 

 mum, E. Tringali, 133 ; Sun-spot Spectra, Father Cortie, 

 158 ; Magnetic Storms and Associated Sun-spots, Rev. 



