Vill 
INDEX 


Hampden (J.), on the Eclipse Expedition, 267 
Hamy (Docteur E, J.), his ‘‘ Précis de Paléontologie Humaine,” 
I - 
caves (Jas.), Cinder of Phosphoric Acid as Manure, 
(Br. A.), 17 
**Harlem, Archives des Sciences Exactes et Natwelles,” 356 
Harris (W. A.), on the Eclipse, 288 
Harrison (W. H.), on a Tubular Postal Service, 450, 476 
Hartley Institution, Southampton, 114 
Haughton (Rev Prof. S., F.R.S.), on the Laws of Muscular 
Exertion, 289 
Hazel, the Fertilisation of the, 347, 414, 509 
Heat Spectra, 276 
Heavy Artillery, its Construction, 69, 128 
Heinemann on the Lepidoptera of Germany, 45 
Hector (Dr. James), on Aurora Australis, 447 
Hele (N. F.), ‘Notes about Aldeburgh, Suffolk,” 485 
Helmholtz (Prof.) on Faraday, 51; his “ ‘Tonempfindungen,” 
46 
eee (Jas.), his Patent Steel Process, 94, 233; on the 
Action of Fluorspar on Cast Iron, 440 
Herschel (A. S.), on the Aurora Borealis, 5; on Aurora 
Borealis at Glasgow, April 9, 1871, 486 
Herschel (Sir J. F. W., F.R.S.), on Terrestrial Magnetism, 249 
Hereditary Deformities, 7, 14, 47, £27, 168 
Higgins (Rev. Henry H.), on Invertebrate Animals in the Free 
Museum, Liverpool, 202, 481 
Highton (Rev. H., M.A.), on Chemical Change, Heat and 
Force, 344.; on Perpetual Motion, 368, 407 ; on ‘the Over- 
throw of Electro-Dynamics,” 386 
Hind (J. R., F.R.S.), on the Transits of Venus in 2004 and 
2012, 513 
Hijaltalin (J. A.), on the Singing of Swans, 2 
Hobart Town, Koyal Society of Tasmania, 359 
Honey Bee, The, 385 
Honolulu, Botany in, 173 
Hooker (Dr. J. D., F.R.S,), on Schimper’s ‘‘ Vegetable 
Palwontology,” 42; on Nepenthes, 147; his Botanical Ex- 
pedition to Morocco, 452 
Hooker (Mrs. F. H.), on Chip Hats, 45; on Electric Telegraphs 
Earthquakes, 47 
Hoolock Gibbon at the Zoological Gardens, 481 
Hopkinsen (Dr. J.), on Work and Force, 407 
Horned Toad of Oregon, 512 
Horticultural Society, Sale of part of Chiswick Gardens, 152 ; 
Prizes offered for Collections of Economic Entomology, 495, 512 
Horticulture in France, Fund to relieve Sufferings trom the 
War, 372, 414 (See Paris) 
Houghton (Rev. W.), on the Cockroach, 27 ; on Fungi, 126 
Hughes (T. Me. K., F.G.S.), on the Cretaceous Period, 308 ; on 
aves near St. Asaph, 327; Occurrences of Glutton near St. 
Asaph, 425 
Hulme, Science Lectures at, 193, 212, 232, 332, 493 
Humboldt Scholarship at Boston, 254 
Huxley (Prof.), his Lay Sermons, 22; on Bacteria and Spon- 
taneous Generation (Br. A.) 37; on Natural Selection (Br. A.) 
38 ; elected President of the Birmingham and Midland Jnsti- 
tute, 231 
Hyatt (James), on the Spectrum of the Aurora, 104 
Hybridity and Mimicry (See Mimicry) 
Tce, its Prismatic Structure, 105, 288 
Ice-making Machine, American, 134 
Imagination in Science, 395 
Im Thurn (E. F’,) on the Irish Fern in Cornwall, 509 
India, Cotton Cultivation in, 153 
India Museum, its Zoological Collection, 328 
Indian Notes, 115, 134, 153, 154, 179, 194, 213, 232; 244, 2755 
295, 308, 313, 353, 372) 394, 413, 472, 494, 499, 513 
Indianopolis Academy of Sciences, 92 
Ingleby (Dr. C. M.), on the apparent Size of the Moon, 228 
Ink Plant of New Granada, 473 
Inorganic Chemistry, Class Book of,” by D. Morris, B.A., 345 
Insulation of St. Michael’s Mount, Cornwall, 206, 245, 265, 289, 
09 
*Tnsects, Metamorphoses of,” Prof. P. M. Duncan, F.R.S., on 
the, 329 
International Exhibition of 1871, 132, 172, 332 
Invertebrate Animals collected in the Free Museum, Liverpool, 
208, 481 

Treland (See Dublin) 
Irish Fern in Cornwall, 509 
Iron and Steel, Influence of Intense Cold on, 256 
Iron and Steel, Papers on the Bessemer process, 94, 211, 374, 
388, 410 
Tron and Steel Institute, 
Annual Meeting, 470 
Iron, Cast, Action of Fluor Spar on, 435 
David Forbes, F.R.S., on the, 422; 
Jack (Prof. W.), on Fernet’s ‘* Elementary Physics,” 23 
Jackson (John R., A. L.S.), on the Produce and Supply of Sugar, 
150, 230; on Algaroba, 347 
Jackson (Rev. Thomas, M.A.), on “Our Feathered Com- 
panions,” 344 
Jamieson (Dr. R. A.), on Sunstroke, 168 
Japan, Botany of, 170 
Japan Clover, 194 
Japan, Gigantic Crabs from, in British Museum, 333 
Japanese Printing, 54 
Jeffreys (J. Gwyn, F.R.S.), on Ocean Currents, 48, 307; on 
Deep-sea Researches, 334, 415, 454 
Jerdan (W. L., F.R.G.S.), on the Action of Vis inertia in the 
Ocean, 505 
Jeremiah (J.), on the Aurora Borealis, 46, 174, 4875 on the 
Milky Way, 48, 167 
Jevons (Prof., W. Stanley), on the Power of Numerical Discri- 
mination, 281, 367, 405 
Johnson (Keith, Jun., F,R.G.S.),7on Ocean Currents, 227, 265, 
368 
a 
Jones (J. Matthew) on Faunas of Ocean Islands, 488 
Jones (Prof. T. Rupert), on Cave Paintings by Bushmen, 107. 
Jones (Thomas Rymer, F.R.S.), his Adaptation of Dr. Brehm’s 
work on Popular Ornithology, 402 
Joule (Dr. J. P., FR S.), on the Performances of the Electro- 
Magnetic Engine, 474 e 
Journal of Botany, 192 (See Botany) 
Jupiter, the Planet, Observations of, 430 
Jute, Cultivation of, 194 
Kaieteur Waterfall, Demerara, 108 
Kent (W. Saville, F.L.S.), on new Species of Madrepore, 492 
Key (Rev. H. C.), on an Earthquake on March 20, 426 
Kinahan (G. H., F.G.S.) on early mentions of the Aurora 
Borealis, 105 ; on the Eozodn Canadense, 267; on the 
Cretaceous Period, 286 
Kingsley (Rev. Canon), Note on Cockroaches, 148 
Kohlrausch (Prof.), on Practical Physics, 121 
Kingfishers, Monograph of the Family of, by R. B, Sharpe, 
F.L.S., 466 
King’s College, 212 
Kirkwood (Prof. D.), on the Spectrum of the Aurora, 126 
Krefit (Gerard), on the Ceratodus Forsteri, 107 
Lacroix (Paul), on the Arts in the Middle Ages, 404 
Ladies’ Educational Association, 312 
Lake-dwellings of the Orinoco, 11 
Lankester (E., M.D., F.R.S.), on Scarlet Fever, 41, 125; on 
Science at School Boards, 161 ; on the Small-pox Epidemic, 
341 
Laney (E. Ray, F.L.S.), on Phosphatic Manures, 62 ; on Dr. 
Nicholson’s ‘‘ Zoology,” 86 
Landslips, 213 
Langley (S. P.), on the American Eclipse Expedition, 228 . 
Langton (John, Ottawa), on Aurora by Daylight, 510 
La Plata, its Resources, 8 
Lartet (M.), Professor of Palzontology, Obituary notice of, 372 
Laughton (J. K.), Can Weather be Influenced by Artificial 
means ? 306 ; on Physical Geography, 383; on Ocean Cur- 
rents, 246, 326, 447, 469 
Learned Societies, and Condition of Science and Learning, by 
W. E. A, Axon, 162 
Leeches, Trade in, 213 
Leeds Naturalists’ Field Club, 54, 98 
Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society, 413, 471 
Leipzig, Physiological Laboratory at, 142 
Lemons from Sicily attacked by a Parasite, 255 
Lenses of Microscopes, Improvements in, 334 
Lenses for Vision below Water, 387 
Lepidoptera of Germany, 45 
Leroy (Charles Georges), on the Intelligence and Perfectibility 
of Animals, 182 
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