hi dex 



U. 



Brilliant Meteor of July 31, Father A. L. Cortie, 204; 

 the Perseid Meteoric Shower, Mr. Denning, 248; C. L. 

 Brook, 24S ; W. H. Stevenson, 248; Miss Warner, 248; 

 Dr. E. Packer, 248 ; W. Johnson, 248 ; the Perseid 

 Shower, igio, E. F. Sawyer, 439; Meteors and Bolides, 

 Prof. Guide Cora, 317; Meteoric Fireballs, Rev. 

 W. F. .\. Ellison, 31S; Prof. J. C. W. Herschel, 318; 

 Fireball on September 2, Edmund J. Webb, 3b3 ; W. F. 

 Denning, 364 ; a Bright Meteor, 438 ; Halley Meteors, 

 Prof. David Todd, 439 ; a Brilliant Meteor on October 23, 

 W. I-'. Denning, 544; J. E. Clark, 544; Simultaneous 

 Photographic Observations of a Remarkable Meteor, 

 Herr Sykora, 544 



Metzograph Grained Screen, the, 182 



Meyer (.Air.), Halley's Comet, 322 



Meyrick (E., F.R.S.), Revision of Australian Tortricina, 64 



Michaelis (Prof. A.), Death of, 210 



Micrometer, a New, Dr. Doberck, 439 



Micronietric Observations of Eros, Results from, 1900, Mr. 

 Hinks, 184 



Microscopy : Royal Microscopical Society, 29 



Microtome, New Large, 470 



Miers (Principal H. A., M.A., D.Sc, F.R.S.), Opening 

 Address in Section L at the Meeting of the British 

 Association at Sheffield, 480 



Milk, Methods Used in the Examination of, and Dairy 

 Products, Dr. Chr. Barthel, 69 



Mill (Dr. Hugh Robert), British Rainfall, 1909, 533 



Miller (W. G.), Various Subdivisions of the Pre-Cambrian 

 Rocks, 443 



Millochaa (G.), Halley's Comet, 120 



Milne (Prof. John, F.R.S.), the California Earthquake of 

 April 18, 1906, vol. ii., the Mechanics of the Earthquake, 

 Harry F. Reid, 165 



Milner (Dr. S. R.), the Sheffield Meeting of the British 

 Association, 174 ; Photographic Study of the Mercury 

 Arc >■)! vacuo, 515 



Minakata (Kumagusu), a Singular Mammal called 

 " Orocoma," 40 



Minchin (Prof. E. .A.), Nova tripansomiaze humana, C. 

 Chagas, 142 



Mineral Waters and Medicinal Springs of the County of 

 Esse.K, a History of the. Miller Christy and May Thresh, 

 361 



Mineralogy : Leitfaden der Mineralogie, Prof. Julius Ruska, 

 38 ; Minerals Formed by the Action of Sea-water upon 

 Roman Metallic Objects Found off the Coast of Mahdia, 

 Tunis, .\. Lacroi.x, 164 ; Wiltshireite, a New Mineral, 

 Prof. W. J. Lewis, F.R.S., 203; the Mineral Survey of 

 Peru, 217; Mineral Resources of Apurimac, A. 

 Jochamowitz, 217; the Provinces of Tayacaja, Angaries, 

 and Huancavelica, E. T. Duenas, 217; Occurrences of 

 Antimony Ores throughout Peru, E. Weckwarth, 217; 

 the Ratio between Uranium and Radium in Minerals, 

 Alex. S. Russell, 238 ; Electrical and Other Properties 

 of Sand, Charles E. S. Phillips at Royal Institution, 255 ; 

 the Ratio between Uranium and Radium in Minerals, 

 Frederick Soddy, F.R.S., 296; Relations of Uralite and 

 Other Secondary .^mphiboles to their Parent Minerals, 

 Dr. \. Wilmore, 372 ; Ore-deposits of Borah Creek, New 

 England, N.S.W., L. A. Cotton, 422 



Minerals : Mineral Specimens acquired by British Museum, 

 467 ; United States Geological Survey, Contributions to 

 Economic Geology, Part ii.. Coal and Lignite, M. R. 

 Campbell, 511; the Ketchikan and Wrangell Mining 

 Districts, .Alaska, F. E. Wright and C. W. Wright, 511 ; 

 Mineral Resources of the Kotsina-Chitina Region, 

 Alaska, F. H. Moffit and A. G. Maddren, 511; Mineral 

 Resources of Alaska, A. H. Brooks, 511; Contributions 

 to Economic Geology, Part i., Metals and Non-metals 

 except Fuels, C. W. Hayes and W. Lindgren, S" I 

 Papers on the Conservation of Mineral Resources, 



5" 

 Mining: the International Congress at Diisseldorf, 20; 

 Memoirs of the Geological Survey in India, the Man- 

 ganese-ore Deposits of India, H. Leigh Fermor, 12S; 

 Tananii Goldfield in Central Australia, H. Y. L. Brown, 

 182 ; Mining Operations in the State of South Australia, 

 342 ; Death of A. H. Stokes, 468 ; First Steps in Coal 

 Mining, .Alexander Forbes, 492 ; Manganese-ore Deposits 

 of the Sandur State, \. Chose, 406 



-Minor (Dr. C. L.), Use of X-rays in the Diagnosis ol 

 Pulmonary Tuberculosis, 436 



.Mira, the Maximum of, in 1909, Prof. Nijland, 273; Mr. 

 Ichinohe, 273 



-Mirande (Marcel), Action of Vapours on Green Plants, 262 



.Mitchell (A. D.), Elimination of a Carbethoxyl Group 

 during the Closing of the F'ive-membered Ring, 519 



-\Iitton (G. E.), the Thames, 138 



Miyoshi (Dr. M.), Rhododendron producing Double 

 Flowers in its Wild State, 372 



" Mock Suns," James F. Ronca, 345 



" Mock Suns" at Eastbourne, Mrs. A. M. Butler, 374 



Moffit (F. H.), Mineral Resources of ths Kotsina-Chitina 

 Region, Alaska, 511 



Moir (Dr. James), Halley's Comet, 9 



.Moir (J. Reid), Discovery of Worked F'lints beneath Un- 

 disturbed Deposits of Crag in the Neighbourhood of 

 Ipswich, 503 



Moir (Dr. T.), Absorption Spectrum of O.xygen and a New 

 Law of Spectra, 98 



Molinari (Prof. Ettore), Chimica Generale e Applicata all' 

 Industria, 170 



Molisch (Prof. H.), Note on Local Coloration of the CeH 

 Wall in Certain Water Plants induced by Manganese 

 Compounds, 151 



MoUusca, Land and Fresh-water, of India, Lieut. -Col. 

 H. H. Godwin-Austen, 427 



Monro (C. F. H.), Indigenous Trees of Southern Rhodesia, 

 55 



Moodie (Dr. R. L.), Alimentary Canal of a Branchio- 

 saurian Salamander from the Carboniferous Shales of 

 Mazon Creek, 17 



Moon : the Genesis of Various Lunar Features, M. 

 Puiseux, 120 



Moore (Dr. Benjamin), Effect of an Increased Percentage 

 of O.xygen on the Vitality and Growth of Bacteria, 181 



.Moore (Clarence B.), Antiquities of the Ouachita Valley, 

 129 



.Moore (Dr. F. J.), Outlines of Organic Chemistry, 360 



Moore (Sir John), Meteorology, Practical and Applied, 293 



.VIoore (J. P.), Polycheetous Annelids Dredged off the 

 Californian Coast by the .WhaUoss in 1904, 246 



.Moore (Prof. W. L.), Meteorological Chart of the North 

 Atlantic Ocean for November, 543 



.Mora (Enzo), Irregularities in the Motion of Algol's 

 Satellite, 472 



Morbology : Smallpox and Vaccination in British India, 

 Major S. P. James, 5 ; Sleeping Sickness, Colonel Seely, 

 16 ; Sleeping Sickness in Europeans, 469 ; Uganda 

 Sleeping-sickness Camps, Dr. A. P. Hodges, 315; the 

 Tuberculosis Conference and Exhibition, 22 ; Mortality of 

 the Tuberculous in Relation to Sanatorium Treatment, 

 W. Palin Elderton and S. J. Perry, 371 ; the Crusade 

 against Consumption, 374 ; the Ninth International Con- 

 ference on Tuberculosis, 507 ; Influence of Predisposition 

 and Heredity, Prof. Landouzy, 508 ; Special Suscepti- 

 bility of Children of Tuberculous Parents, Prof. Calmette, 

 508; M. Piery, 508; Analysis of 232 Fatal Cases of 

 Tuberculosis, Dr. Nathan Raw, 508 ; Importance of Pre- 

 disposition, Dr. C. Theodore Williams, 508; Action of 

 Sunlight and High Altitudes, Dr. Hermann von 

 Schrijtter, 509 ; Grouse Disease, Drs. Cobbett and 

 Graham Smith, 48; House-flies and Disease, Dr. C. 

 Gordon Hewitt, 73 ; the Progress of Cancer Research, 

 126; the International Cancer Conference at Paris, 545^ 

 Ayia\ilasma marginale, a New Genus and Species of the 

 Protozoa, Dr. A. Theiler, 132 ; Development of Piro- 

 plasma parvum (Protozoa) in the Various Organs of 

 Cattle, Dr. R. Gonder, 132 ; Nova tripanosomiaze 

 humana, C. Chagas, Prof. E. A. Minchin, 142 ; Original 

 Source and Spread of Bubonic Plague, H. B. Wood, 

 149 ; Treatment of Trypanosomiasis of Man and Animals, 

 150; Health, Progress and Administration in the West 

 Indies, Sir Rubert W. Boyce, F.R.S., 174; an Epidemic 

 Disease in Trout, A. Laveran and A. Pettit, 22S ; Cholera 

 and its Control, 239; Malaria Prophylaxis in India, 240; 

 Prevention of Malaria, Dr. Malcolm Watson, 340: 

 Factors in the Transmission and Prevention of Malaria 

 in the Panama Canal Zone, Dr. S. T. Darling, 401 ; 

 Etiology of Beriberi, 401 ; Death of Cecil H. Leaf, 468; 

 Trypanosome Found in the Blood of a Patient in 



/ 



