Index 



NaturCt 

 ^Marc/t 45, 1909 



and to Meteorological Science, 388 ; Risultats du Voyage 

 du S.Y. Bclgica en iSqy-ri, Oceanographie, 460 



Millais (J. G.), a Woman's Way through Unknown Labra- 

 dor, Mrs. L. Hubbard, 401 



Millard (Columbus N.), the Wonderful House that Jack Has, 



Millir (W. Ci.), the Grcnvillc Hastings Unconformity in 



Ontario and Quebec, 472 

 Millet (J. 1?.), Submarine Signalling by Sound, 434 

 Milne (Sir J.), Seismological Investigations, 23 ; Earthquake 



Records, 321 

 Milne (Dr. J. R.), Photographic Apparatus for .Automatic- 

 ally Recording the Readings of the Scale and Vernier of 

 any Instrument, 329 

 Minakata (Kumagusu), Polypus Vinegar — Sea-blubber 



.Arrack, S; an Alga growing on Fish, cio 

 Minchin (Prof. E. A.), Crocodiles and Tsetse Flies, 45S 

 Mineralogy : a Manganese Deposit in Southern India, R. O. 

 .\hlers, 118; Mica from North Wales and Chlorite from 

 Connemara, A. Hutchinson and W. Campbell Smith, 147 : 

 Carminite in Cornwall, A. Russell, 147 ; Mineralogical 

 Society, 147, 44S ; Petrography of the Newark Igneous 

 Rocks, J. \'. Lewis, 172 ; Radio-active Changes in the 

 Earth, Hon. R. J. Strutt, F.R.S., at Royal Institution, 

 20(1; Magnesium in Water and Rocks, Prof. Ernest H. L. 

 Schwarz, 300 ; the So-called Gabbro of Dun Mountain, 

 Dr. P. .Marshall, 350 ; Labradorite-norite with Porphyritic 

 Labradorite, Prof. J. H. L. \'ogt, 418 ; Identity of 

 Poonahlite with Mesolite, Dr. H. L. Bowman, 44S ; 

 Detrital .Andalusite in Tertiary and Post-tertiary Sands, 

 H. H. Thomas, 44S 

 .Minerals : Sandstone a Mineral, 139 



Mining : Discovery of Coal in Madagascar by Captain Col- 

 canap, .Marcellin Boule, 50 ; a Manganese Deposit in 

 Southern India, R. O. Ahlers, 118; a Theory of Volcanic 

 -Action and Ore Deposits, their Nature and Cause, Hiram 

 W. Hi.xon, 410 : Additional Localities for Idocrase in 

 Cornwall, G. Barrow and H. H. Thomas, 448 

 Miremont (Comte de). Practical Coastal Navigation, includ- 

 ing Simple Methods of finding Latitude, Longitude, and 

 Deviation of Compass, 340 

 Molesworth (Major Percy B.), Death and Obituarv Notice 



of. 31.S 

 Molisch (Dr. H.), E.\periments upon Forcing the Resting 



Shoots of Woody Plants, 199 

 Molyneux (A. J. C), Geology of Bechuanaland Protectorate, 



471 

 Monti (Prof. Rina), Active and Passive Migrations of the 



Fauna of the Italian Alpine Lakes, 466 

 Monvoisin (A.), Inconveniences of Potassium Bichromate as 



Preservative of Milk Samples, 270 

 Moodie (R. L.), the Lateral-line System in Extinct .Amphi- 

 bians, 198 

 Moon, Remarkably Dark Penumbral Eclipse of the, 378 

 Moore (C. B.), Prehistoric Pottery in America, 265 

 Moore (Sir John), Is our Climate Changing? 25 

 Moore (Prof.), A'ariation of .Amount of Free Hydrochloric 



.Acid of Gastric Contents in Cancer, 317 

 Moorhead (W. K.), Fort .Ancient, the Great Prehistoric 



Earthwork of Warren County, Ohio, 258 

 Moral Education Congress. Papers on Moral Education com- 

 municated to the First Fnternational, Prof. J. A. Green, 

 I.S4 

 Moral Ideas, the Origin and Development of the, E. Wester- 



marck. Prof. A. E. Taylor, 481 

 Moral Instruction and Training in Schools, Prof. J. .A. 



Green, 154 

 Moral Superiority? F. C. Constable, 282; Laura D. H. 



Dukes, 429 

 Morbolofjy : Enteric Fever in India, Lieut. -Colonel Semple 

 and Captain Grieg, 21 ; Mobility and Dissemination of 

 Infected Dust due to the Disturbance of Dried Tuber- 

 culous Sputum, G. Kiiss, 29 ; the International Congress 

 on Tuberculosis at Washington, 49 ; Relationship between 

 Human and Bovine Tuberculosis, Prof. Woodhead, 177 ; 

 Properties of the Tubercle Bacillus cultivated on Bile. 

 H. Calmette and C. Guirin, 299 ; the Prevention of 

 Tuberculosis, Dr. Arthur Newsholme, 422 ; the Conta- 

 gion of Tuberculosis by .Air, M. Le Noir and Jean 

 Camus, 450; Cows' Milk and Tubercle Bacilli, 466; 



Microchemical Changes occurring in Appendicitis, Dr. 

 Owen Williams, 78; A'ellow Fever at Saint-Nazaire, .M. 

 Chantemesse, 119; Transmission of Trypanosoma lewisi 

 by Fleas and Lice, Prof. Nuttall, 178 ; Therapeutic Inocu- 

 lation for Generalised Bacterial Infections, L. Noon, 178; 

 .Ato.xyl and Sleeping Sickness, Dr. A. D. P. Hodges, 198 ; 

 I'iroplasma mutans. Dr. -A. Theiler, 235 ; Uber Nervose 

 Dyspepsic, Georges L. Dreyfus, 248 ; Advance in Know- 

 Ic-dge of Cancer, 261 ; Variation of Amount of Free Hydro- 

 chloric Acid of Gastric Contents in Cancer, Prof. Moore, 

 317: Black-water Fever, S. R. Christophers and C. .A. 

 Bcntley, 313; Treatment of Balcri in the Horse by Orpi- 

 ment, A. Thirou.x and L. Tcppaz, 360 ; Malaria at Mara- 

 thon, 374; Rats and Plague, Dr. Ashburton Thompson, 

 436 ; Crocodiles and Tsetse Flies, Prof. E. .A. .Minchin, 

 458; "Fowl Cholera" due to a Spiroch.xte, Colonel 

 Pease, 497 

 Moreau (Georges), Mass of the Negative Ion of a Flame, 



479 

 Morehouse, Comet, 19081;, M. Borrelly, 48; L. Rabourdin, 

 48 ; M. Gautier, 48 ; Prof. Barnard, 48 ; Prof. Kobold, 

 48; .M. Qu(5nisset, 80; M.M. Deslandres and Bernard, 80; 

 Dr. Smart, 108, 143 ; Prof. Frost, 142 ; Prof. E. C. 

 Pickering, 142 ; Herr Winkler, 142 ; M. Geelmuyden, 

 143; Herr Ebell, 143; M. Flammarion, 231; MM. le 

 Comte de la Baume Pluvinel and Baldet, 231 ; R. C. 

 Johnson, 295 ; F'urthcr Observations of Morehouse's 

 Comet, 1908c, J. Guillaume, 260; the Spectrum of Comet 

 Morehouse, 1908c, A. de la IBaume Pluvinel and F. Baldet, 

 20; M.M. Deslandres and Bosler, 169; M. Bernard, 169; 

 the Spectrum and Form of Comet Morehouse, Prof. Frost 

 and Mr. Parkhurst, 439 ; Prof. Barnard, 439 ; Prof. Camp- 

 bell and Dr. S. .Albrecht, 439 ; Changes in the Tail of, 

 169; Prof. Max Wolf, 351 ; Acceleration of Matter in the 

 Tail of Morehouse's Comet, MM. Baldet and Quenisset, 

 200 ; Prof. Barnard, 200 ; Further Photographs of More- 

 house's Comet, Prof. Barnard, 320 



Morel (.A.), Preparation of Definite Natural Peptides, 419 



-Morgulis (S.), Effect of .Alkaloids on Early Development of 

 Toxopiieustes varicgatiis, 292 



Morphology : the Origin of a Land Flora, Prof. F. O. 

 Bower, F.R.S., i ; the Lateral-line System in Extinct 

 .Amphibians, R. L. Moodie, 198 ; Evolution of the Ceta- 

 cean Tail-fin, F. AV. Ash, 22S ; Hyperdactylism in Houdan 

 Domesticated Fowls, Marie Kaufmann-Wolff, 257 



Morrill (Dr.), Hydrocyanic Acid as an .Agent for Destruc- 

 tion of Insect Pests, 259 



Morris (Colonel Sir W. G., K.C.M.G., C.B.), Geodetic 

 Survey of South Africa, 103 



Morrison (Dr. .A.), .Adaptation of Plants to their Environ- 

 ment, Modifications displayed by AVest .Australian 

 Xerophytes, 106 



Morrison (Chas. E.), Highway Engineering, 336 



.Moss (Dr.), the Woodlands of England, 85 



Moths of the British Isles, the, Richard South, 427 



Motor Traffic, Statistics of, .A. R. Butterworth, 16 



Mottier (D. M.), History and Control of Sex, 105 



Mount Kcnia, the Forest Region of, 108 



Mountaineering in the Land of the Midnight Sun, Mrs. 

 Aubrey le Blond, 369 



Moutier (.A.), .Application of d'.Arsonvalisation localised, 419 ; 

 Hypotensive Action of d'.Arsonvalisation in Permanent 

 Hypertension, 480 



Muhlberg (Prof.), State of Switzerland during the Ice .Age, 



234 

 Munro (Dr. Robert), les .Stations lacustres d'Europe aux 



.Ages de la Pierre et du Bronze, 427 

 Muntz (A.), Use of Calcium Cyanamide in .Agriculture, 



119; the Diffusion of Saline Manures in the Soil, 449 

 .Museums, the Exhibition of Fishes in. Dr. F. .A. Lucas, 



160 

 Music, the Threshold of. Dr. AVilliam Wallace, 247 

 Muskel- und Gelenkmechanik, Lehrbuch der, Prof. H. 



.Strasser, 397 

 Mutation et Traumatismes, L. Blaringhem, ^f^-, 

 Mvcology : Potato Black Scab, Prof. T. Johnson, 67 : Prof. 



F. E. Weiss, 98 ; Report on Economi'- Mvcolosjv for the 



A'ear 1907-R, E. S. Salmon. 199 : les Zooc^cidies des 



Plantes d'Europe et du Bassin de la Mediterran^e, C. 



Houard, 339 



