vi Lndex 
Nature, 
_Dec: 18; 1902. 
Anderson (Prof. R. J.), on the Relation of the Parietal Bone in 
Primates, 641 
Anderson (Dr. Tempest), Royal Society Report on the West 
Indian Eruptions, 402 
Andrée (M.), the Fate of, 255 
Andrews (Thomas, F.R.S., and Charles Reginald), Microscopic 
Effects of Stress on Platinum, 213 
Andrews (Wm.), Stopping Down the Lens of the Human Eye, 
31 
Anglesey, Jaspers of South-Eastern, Edward Greenly, 95 
Angus (Herbert F.), German Progress in Optical Work, Paper 
Read at the Optical Society, 138 
Animal Forms: a Second Book of Zoology, Dr. David S. 
Jordan and Prof. Harold Heath, 605 
Animal Intelligence, L. C. Hurt, 459 
Animal Life, the Story of, B. Lindsay, 173 
Animali, la Protezione degli, N. Lico, 414 
Animals, an Introduction to the Study of the Comparative 
Anatomy of, G. C. Bourne, 314 
Annandale (N.), Bipedal Locomotion in Lizards, 577 
Annandale (Nelson), the Wild and Civilised Tribes of the Malay 
Peninsula, 664; the Human Souls and Ghosts of the Malays 
of Patani, 664 
Annelids, Collateral Budding in two, Dr. H. P. Johnson, 
86 
Antarctica: Royal Geographical Society, President’s Opening 
Address, Current Arctic and Antarctic Expeditions, 113 ; the 
First Fruits of the German Antarctic Expedition, 223; the 
Morning, the Auxiliary Ship of the National Antarctic 
Expedition, 255 ; the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition, 
W. S. Bruce, 255; Report on the Collections of Natural 
History made in the Antarctic Regions during the Voyage of 
the Southern Cross, R. B. Sharpe and F. J. Bell, 322; Pro- 
gress of the Swedish Polar Expedition, 421; the Scottish 
Antarctic Expedition, W. S. Bruce, 631 
Anthracite Coal Industry, the, Peter Roberts, 50 
Anthropology : the Peoples of Malacca, Frank F. Laidlaw, 47 ; 
the Tribes of the Brahmaputra Valley, L. A. Waddell, 91 ; 
the Coorgs and Yeruvas, an Ethnological Contrast, T. H. 
Holland, 91; Trephining in the South Seas, Rev. J. A. 
Crump, 136; the Ruling Races of Prehistoric Times in India, 
South-Western Asia and Southern Europe, J. F. Hewitt, 
145; History and Chronology of the Myth-making Age, J. F. 
Hewitt, 145; Savage Island, an Account of a Sojourn in 
Niué and Tonga, Basil Thomson, E. Sidney Hartland, 347; 
What the United States of America is doing for Anthro- 
pology, Anthropological Institute Presidential Address, Dr. 
A. C. Haddon, F.R.S., 430; Animistic Beliefs among the Yaos 
of British Central Africa, Rev. A. Hetherwick, 514; Prehis- 
toric Man in Burma, R. C. J. Swinhoe, 541; the Neglect of 
Anthropology in British Universities, ‘* Anthropotamist,” 
654; Right-handedness and Left-brainedness, Prof. D. J. 
Cunningham, F.R.S., 659; see a/so Section H, British Asso- 
ciation. 
Ants, Descent of Winged, on Teplitz and Brussels, 396 
Ape-House, the Zoological Society’s New, 406 
Applied Mechanics, the Roorkee Manual of, Stability of Struc- 
tures and the Graphic Determintion of Lines of Resistance, 
Lieut.-Colonel J. H. C. Harrison, 340 
Arabia, Legends of Palestine and, 517 
Arachnidz : the Common Spiders ot the United States, James H. 
Emerton, 630 
Arbor Low Stone Circle, Derbyshire, Excavations at, H. 
Balfour, 663 
Arboricultural Society, Visit of the English, to Compicgne, Prof. 
W. R. Fisher, 450 
Archeology: the Wiltshire Archeological and Natural 
History Magazine, Stonehenge and its Barrows, William 
Long, F.S.A., Stonehenge Bibliography Number, W. Jerome 
Harrison, Sir Norman Lockyer, K.C.B., F.R.S., 25; the 
Ancient Ruins of Rhodesia, R. N. Hall and W. G. Neal, 
Prof. A. H. Keane, 34; Discoveries in the Churchyard of 
St. George the Martyr, Southwark, 39; the Farmers’ Years, | 
1. Carnac and its Environs, Sir Norman Lockyer, K.C.B., 
F.R.S., 104; Preliminary Report on a Journey of Archeeo- 
logical and Topographical Exploration in Chinese Turkestan, 
M. A. Stein, 284 ; the Older Civilisation of Greece, Further 
Discoveries in Crete, 390 ; corr. 424; Further Discoveries in 
the Great Ruins at Zimbabye, 397; the Early Christian 
Monuments of the Isle of Man, P. M. C. Kermode, 424 ; 
Archzeological Remains on the Summit of the Nevado de 
Chai, Dr. Erland Nordenskiéld, F.R.S., 440 
Archibald (E. H.), Decomposition of Mercurous Chloride by 
Dissolved Chlorides, 233 : 
Architecture ; the Left-handed Spiral Staircase in the Chateau de 
Blois Modelled from Volta vespertilio, Theodore Cook, 39; 
Photography as applied to Architectural Measurement and 
Surveying, J. Bridges Lee at Society of Arts, 235; Naval 
Architecture, the Proposed Experimental Tank for Testing 
Ship Models for Kesistance, 128; Les Bateux Sous-Marins 
et les Submersibles, R. D’Equevilley, 290; Death and 
Obituary Notice of Benjamin Martell, 305 
Arctica: Royal Geographical Society, the President’s Opening 
Address, Current Arctic and Antarctic Expeditions, 113 : 
Expedition Norvégienne de 1899-1900 pour I’Etude des 
Aurores Boréales, Resultats des Recherches Magnetiques, Kr. 
Birkeland, Dr. C. Chree, F.R.S., 227; the Fate of M. 
Andrée, 255; Year's Work of the Baldwin-Ziegler Arctic 
Expedition, Evelyn B. Baldwin, 349; Flora Arctica, C. H. 
Ostenfeld, 490 ; Return of the Arctic Expeditions, 542 
Arithmetic, a First Step in, J. G. Bradshaw, 491 
Arithmetic for Schools, an, J. P. Kirkman and A. E. Field, 
491 
Armagnat (M.), the Study of Resonance by means of Oscillo- 
graphs, 307 b 
““Armorl ” Electro-Capillary Relay, the, 151, 175 
Armstrong (Dr. E. F.), Synthetical Action of Enzymes, 662 ; 
Recent Synthetical Researches in the Glucoside Group, 662 
Armstrong (Prof. Henry E., V.P.R.S.), Persulphuric Acids, 45 ; 
Opening Address in Section L at the Belfast Meeting of the 
British Association, 589 
Armstrong-Orling System of Wireless Telegraphy, 327 
Arnold (D. J.), New York Central Railway to be Worked 
Electrically, 398 
Arnold (Prof. J. O.), Constituents of Hardened Steel, 63 
Arnold-Forster (Mr.), the Duties of the State towards Science, 
62 
Arrhenius’s (Prof.) Theory of Cometary Tails and Aurore, 
Prof. John Cox, 54, Dr. J. Halm, 55 
Arsenic, Decompesition of Compounds of Selenium and Tel- 
lurium by Moulds and its Influence on the Biological Test for, 
Dr. Rosenheim, 214 
Biscnle as a Normal Constituent of Animals, Armand Gautier, 
21 
Arsenic in the Organism, Gabriel Bertrand, 216 
Arsdale (M. B. van), Physical Experiments, 458 
Auiacl Mineral Waters, the Evolution of, William Kirkby, 
02 
Assaying and Metallurgical Analysis for the Use of Students, 
Chemists and Assayers, E. L. Rhead and Prof. A. Humboldt 
Sexton, 628 
Assheton-Smith (G, W. Duff), Marine Biology in Wales, 282 
Astralium, Two Species of, from Port Jackson, H. Leighton 
Kesteven, 96 
Astrographic Chart, the, Prof. H. H. Turner, F.R.S., 273 
Astronomy: a Remarkable Lunar Halo, Prof. E. E. Barnard, 
5; I. W. Croome Smith, 85; Signals from Mars, Percival 
Lowell, 18; the Orion Nebulz and Movement in the Line of 
Sight, Prof. H. C. Vogel and Dr. Eberhard, 18; Radial 
Velocity of the Orion Nebula, Prof. H. C. Vogel and Dr. 
Eberhard, 309; Our Astronomical Column, 18, 40, 68, 87, 
115, 186, 208, 233, 258, 281, 309, 331, 352, 380, 401, 
425, 450, 486, 514, 541, 557, 613, 638, 662; Changes 
on the Moon’s Surface, Prof. William H. Pickering, 40; 
Changes on the Moon, Prof. W. H. Pickering, 223 ; Theory 
of the Motion of the Moon, Ernest W. Brown, F.R.S., 356; 
Prof. Arrhenius’s Theory of Cometary Tails and Aurore, 
Prof. John Cox, 54. Dr. J. Halm, 55; Elements of Comet 
@ 1902 (Brooks), 68; Reduction of Measures of Swift's 
Comet (a 1899) from Photographs with a Portrait Lens of 30- 
inch Focus and 5-inch Aperture, Mr. Filon, 238; the 
Periodical Comet Tempel- Swift (1869-1880), 258 ; Ephemeris 
for the Searchof the Comet Tempel-Swift, F. Bossert, 557 ; 
another New Comet, John Grigg, 514, 557; Comet 1902 4, 
515, 614; Observation of Perrine’s Comet 1902 4, 558; 
Photograph of, 638; Colaba Observatory, 68; New Variable 
Stars, 68, 234; the Naming of New Variable Stars, 425 ; 
Variable Stars, 309; Notation of Variable Stars, 208; Ob- 
servations of the Variable Star x* Cygni during 1899, 
282; Qbservations of Fifty-eight Long-Period Variables, 
