Index 



r Naiur 

 \_Decetnber i 



Im, ,ii, I l,Lniisliy -Scciion, A. K. Uunsian, 31 ; Science I 

 J clie Empire, 37; JuiiiDr lixperimental Science, W. M. 

 uoioii, 50 ; Imperial College of Science and Technology, 

 ■ ; Progress of Science in the Century, Prof. J. Arthur 

 I humson, Prof. G. H. Bryan, F.R.S., 74; a German 

 Alice Reader, with Notes and Vocabulary, Dr. W. H. 

 i\ ait, 149 ; the South-eastern Union of Scientiljc Socie- 

 ties, iSO; Prof. Silvanus P. Thompson, F.R.S., Address 

 at, 180 ; Science and Poetry, C. L. Barnes, 191 ; die 

 philosophischen Grundlagen der Wissenschaften, Prof. 

 B. Weinstein, 292 ; Scientilic Work in the Sea-fisheries, 

 Prof. W. C. -Mcintosh, I-'.R.S., at the Royal Institution, 

 301 ; the Aim and .'\chievcmenls of Scientific Method, an 

 lipistemological Essay, Dr. T. Percy Nunn, 443 ; Science 

 and Government, 497 ; Sir W. T. Thiselton-Dyer, 

 K.C.M.G., F.R.S., 565; A. T. S., 565; Science and 

 Religion, Rev. J. Gerard, 523; Dr. B. C. A. Windic, 

 523; Scientific Work in India, 548; Mr. Haldane on 

 Science in Commerce, 574 ; Science in the East, Dr. C. 

 Chree, F.R.S., 593 ; Forthcoming Books of Science, 

 600 ; the Advancement of Science, Dr. W. N. Shaw, 

 F.R.S., 613 

 Scientific Centres, Some, X., the Liverpool School of 

 Tropical Medicine, Prof. Ronald Ross, F.R.S.; 519 ; 

 XI., the Physical Laboratories of Manchester University, 

 Prof. A. Schuster, F.R.S., Dr. J. A. Harker, 640 

 Scott (Dr. D. H., F.R.S.), the Flowering Plants of the 

 Mesozoic Age in the Light of Recent Discoveries, Addi'ess 

 at Royal Microscopical Society, 113 

 Scott (G. Shaw), Case-hardening, 581 

 Sea, the International Council for the Study of the, 1S7 

 Sea. the Voice of the, 492 

 Sea-fisheries, Scientific Work in the, Prof. W. C. 



Mcintosh, F.R.S., at the Royal Institution, 301 

 Seares (Prof.), Search-ephemerides for Comet 1894 (E. 

 Swift), 337 ; Search-ephemerides for Comet 1894 IV., 422 

 Searle (G. F. C), Force Required to Stop a Moving Elec- 

 trified Sphere, 511 

 Scars (J. E.), the Longitudinal Impact of Metal Rods with 



Rounded Ends, 167 

 Seaton (A. E.), Uses of High-tensile Steel, 209 

 Seaton (Dr.), Typhoid Fever in Surrey for igob, 669 

 Secondary Education, Endowments for, C. F. Daniell, 627 

 See (Prof. T. J. J.), the Cause of Earthquakes, 341 

 Seidell (Atherton), Solubilities of Inorganic and Organic 



Substances, Supp. to October 10, i.\ 

 Seismology : on Some Principles of Seismic Geology, Wil- 

 liam Herbert Hobbs, Dr. C. Davison, 18; the Geotectonic 

 and Geodynamie Aspects of Calabria and North-eastern 

 Sicily, a Study in Orientation, William Herbert Hobbs, 

 Dr. C. Davison, 18 ; Earthquakes of April 15, iS, and 

 19, 1907, recorded at Paris, G. Bigourdan, 23 ; the 

 Jamaica Earthquake, Prof. C. W. Brown, 86 ; the Erup- 

 tion of Krakaton and the Pulsation of the Earth, Prof. 

 H. Nagaoka, Sg ; Two Heavy Seismographs, Dr. 

 Wiechert, 164; Constitution of the Interior of the Earth 

 ns Revealed by Earthquakes, some New Light on the 

 Origin of Oceans, R. D. Oldham. 286; the Swansea 

 Earthquake of June 27, 1906, Dr. C. Davison, 286 ; the 

 Ochil Earthquakes of September, 1900, to April, 1907, 

 Dr. C. Davison, 286 ; the Cause of Earthquakes, Prof. 

 T. J. J. See, 341 ; Earthquake Shocks in Norway in 

 iqo6, C. F. Kolderup, 475 ; Relation between Distribu- 

 tion of Petroleum-bearing Regions and Seismic Zones. 

 L. C. Tassart. 512; International Seismological Con- 

 gress, 521 ; How Earthquakes came to have an Inter- 

 national Importance, 521; Earthquake Shadow, Prof. 

 V. Monti, ;;97 

 Seligmann (Dr.), Prehistoric Objects from New Guinea, 



462 

 Selous (F. C), Recent Hunting Trips in British North 



America, 415 

 Senderens (Abbd J. B.), Products obtained by a New 



Method of Catalysis, 112 

 Sentcr (Dr. G.), Hydrates in Solution, 287; on the Nature 



of lonisation, 460 

 September Meteors, 50^ ; H. E. Goodson, ,55 ; F. E. 



Baxand.nil, 5S0 

 Serotherapy : Inqulrv into the Nature of the Substances 

 in Serum wliirh influence Phagocytosis, George Dean, 



213; the Injection of Artificial Serums in Chlorosis, 

 C. Fleig, 344 ; the Vienna Serum Institute, 380 ; the 

 Pasteur Institute of Paris in 1906, 474 ; Preventive 

 Inoculation in Plague, Dr. Strong, 571 ; the Serum 

 Treatment of Typhoid Fever, Prof. Chantemesse, 572 ; 

 Gastrotoxic Serum, Dr. Charles Bolton, 007 



Sewage, Purification of Boston, 284 



Sewell (Tyson), the Construction of Dynamos (.Alternating 

 and Direct Current), 217 



Sex, Inheritance and, in \hraxas grossiilariata, L. Don- 

 caster, 248 



Sexton (F. Peake), the .'\tomic Weight of Cobalt, 316 



Sfere cosmografiche e loro applicazione alia risoluzione di 

 Problem! di Geographia Matematica, Prof. .Xngelo L. 

 Andreini, 612 



Shaft Sinking in Difficult Cases, J. Ricmer, 29: 



Sharks : Chlamydoselachus in the Waters of New South 

 Wales, D. G. Stead, 60S 



Shaw (Dr. W. N., F.R.S.), Obituary Notice of Dr. 

 .Alexander Buchan, F.R.S., 83 ; Air Currents and the 

 Laws of Ventilation, 442 ; Modern Methods of treating 

 Observations, 461 ; the Advancement of Science, 613 



Shaxbv (John H.), Elementarv Electrical Engineering, 172 



Shelly' (Dr. C. E.), a Health Reader, 381 



Shenstone (J. C), the CEcological Functions of Stolons and 

 Cleistogamous Flowers, 71 



Sheppard (Dr. S. E.), Investigations on the Theory of the 

 Photographic Process, 468 ; the Colour of Dve Solutions, 

 616 



Sherrington (Prof. C. S., F.R.S.), the Integrative Action 

 of the Nervous System, 122 ; Reciprocal Innervation of 

 Antagonistic Muscles, 165 ; the Coordination of Reflex 

 Muscular Movements in the Spinal .Animal, 535 



Ships, Unsolved Problems in the Design and Propulsion 

 of. Dr. Francis Elgar, F.R.S., " James Forrest " Lecture 

 at the Institution of Civil Engineers, 303 



Shrubsall (Dr. F. C), Results obtained by Anthropometric 

 Methods, 505 



Shull (.-\. F.), the North American Shori-talloil Shrew- 

 mouse, 524 



Shull (Dr. G. H.), Results of Crossing White-seeded 

 Strains with Plants having Coloured Seeds, 421 



Shult (F. T.), the Virgin Soils of the New North-West 

 .America, 597 



Sidgre.aves (Rev. W.), Spectrum of Mira Ceti, 215 



Silverlock (O. C), Sensibility of Ants to Changes of 

 Temperature and to the Ultra-violet Rays, 524 



.Simmersbach (Oskar), die Eisenindustrie. 6 



Simmonds (C.l, les Industries de la Conservation des 

 .\liments, X. Rocques, 266; Food Inspection and 

 .Adulteration, Sir James Crichton Browne, 547 



Simon (T.), Reduction of Aromatic Nitro-compounds to 

 Azoxy-derivatives in .Acid Solution, 214 



Simpson (John), Game and Game Coverts, 415 



Simpson (R. R.), the Jaipur and Nazira Coalfields, Upper 

 -Assam, 64 



Simpson (Dr. Sutherland). Degenerations following Experi- 

 mental Lesions in the Motor Cortex of the Monkey, 407 ; 

 Pressure of Bile Secretion and the Mechanism of Bile 

 .Absorption in Obstruction of the Bile Duct, 607 

 Simpson (William), Granite Quarrying in .Aberdeenshire, 



373 

 Simroth (Prof.), Colour \ ariations in the Skin of the 



Hamster, i;33 

 Sinai, the Topography and Geolosv of the Peninsula of, 



(South-eastern Portion), W. F. Hume, ,14 

 Sinclair (James), First A'ear's Course in Prariic.il Physics, 



50 

 Sinel (J.), an Outline of the N.-itural History i.f Our Shores, 



347 

 Single-plate Colour Photography, 317 

 Sitter (Dr. W. de), a Remarkable Periodic SoUiti<in of the 



Restricted Problem of Three Bodies, 458 

 Siogren (Prof.). Iron-ore Supplies, 484 

 Slade (R. E.), Reducibility of Magnesia by Carbon, 143 

 Slopping Sickness, International Conference on. Lord 



Fitzmaurice. 188 

 Slipher (V. M.), the Spectrum of Mira, i- : the Spectrum 



of Saturn, 162; Peculiar Spcrtrum of e r.-,pririirni, 229; 



Mars, 374 



