224 



REPORT 1860. 



J. K. Porter on the best plan of, 194 ; 

 H. Roberts on, 196. 



Cowper (E.) on a new mode of obtaining 

 a blast of very high temperature in the 

 manufacture of iron, 204. 



Crawfurd (John) on the influence of 

 domestic animals on the progress of 

 civilization, 155; on the Aryan or 

 Indo-Germanic theory of races, 154. 



Crustacea, British well shrimps, new, 

 Rev. A. R. Hogan on, 116. 



Cull (R.) on certain remarkable deviations 

 in the stature of Europeans, 155 ; on 

 the existence of a true plura^f a per- 

 sonal pronoun in a living European 

 language, 155. 



Cumberland and Northumberland, J. A. 

 Knipe on the Tynedale coal-field and 

 the whin-sill of, 86. 



Curves of the fourth order, having three 

 double points, A. Cayley on, 4. 



Cybulz (Captain) on a set of relief models 

 of the Alps, &c, 155. 



Cydippe, J. Price on, 120. 



Daubeny (Dr.) on the elevation theory 

 of volcanos, 75 ; on the final causes of 

 the sexuality of plants, in reference to 

 Mr. Darwin's Theory, 109; experi- 

 ments on equivocal generation, 115. 



Death by aconite, on the mode of, 133; 

 from the administration of anaesthetics, 

 on the nature of, 136. 



Deglutition of alimentary fluids, Prof. J. 

 H. Corbett on the, 216. 



De la Rue (Warren) on a new acetic 

 ether occurring in a natural resin, 71 ; 

 on the isomers of cumo!, 71. 



Dennis (Rev. J. B. P.) on the mode of 

 flight of the Pterodactyles of the copro- 

 lite bed near Cambridge, 76. 



Devon and Cornwall, W. Pengelly on the 

 chronological and geographical distri- 

 bution of the Devonian fossils of, 91. 



Devon, South, E. Vivian on the climate 

 of, 56. 



Devonian fossils of Devon and Cornwall, 

 W. Pengelly on the chronological and 

 geographical distribution of the, 91. 



Dingle (Rev. J.) on the corrugation of strata 

 in the vicinity of mountain ranges, 77. 



Dip-circle, induction, new, J. A. Broun 

 on a, 23. 



Dispersion, chromatic, M. Ponton on the 

 laws of, 16. 



Distances, P. Adie on an instrument for 

 measuring, 59. 



Dolomites and gypsum, T. S. Hunt on, 83. 



Donegal, north of, Prof. Harkness on the 

 metamorphic rocks of, 79. 



Dowden (R.) on the effect of a rapid cur- 

 rent of air, 39 ; on a plant poisoning a 

 plant, 110; on local taxation for local 

 purposes, 191. 



Draper (Dr. H.) on a reflecting telescope 

 for celestial photography, erecting at 

 Hastings, near New York, 63 ; on the 

 intellectual development of Europe, 

 considered with reference to the views 

 of Mr. Darwin and others, 115. 



Dresser (Dr. C.) on the morphological 

 laws in plants, 110; on abnormal forms 

 of Passiflora crerulea, 110. 



Drift, triassie, from the neighbourhood of 

 Frome, C. Moore on the contents of, 87. 



Du Boulay (M.) on the meteorological 

 phenomena of the vernal equinoctial 

 week, 39. 



Duppa (B.) on a new organic compound 

 containing boron, 69. 



Durham (Arthur E.) on the nature of 

 sleep, 129. 



Earnshaw (Rev. S.) on the velocity of 

 the sound of thunder, 58 ; on the tri- 

 plicity of sound, 58. 



Earth's crust, Rev. J. Dingle on the for- 

 mation of the, 77. 



internal structure, Prof. Hennessy 



on studying the, from phenomena ob- 

 served at its surface, 35. 



Earthquake shocks, in the laterite of In- 

 dia, J. A. Broun on the velocity of, 74. 



Earthquakes and volcanic phenomena, T. 

 S. Hunt on the theory of, 84. 



Education of the destitute and neglected 

 children of Great Britain, Mary Car- 

 penter on help from the Government 

 grant for the, 184. 



, E. Chadwick on the physiological 



as well as psychological limits to mental 

 labour, 185. 



Egerton (Sir P. de M. G.) on the ichthy- 

 olites of Farnell Road, Forfarshire, 77; 

 on a new form of ichthyolitc discovered 

 by Mr. Peach, 7S. 



Eggs of Buecinum, on the development 

 of, 139. 



Elder (John) on the cylindrical spiral 

 boiler, 204. 



Electric fluid, Rev. T. Rankin on the dif- 

 ferent motions of, 30. 



light, M. Serrin on an automatic 



regulator for, 19. 



light of mercury, Dr. J. H. Gladstone 



on the chromatic properties of the, 13. 



telegraphs, submarine, C. W. Sie- 

 mens and M. Werner on the principles 

 and practice involved in dealing with 

 the electrical conditions of, 32. 



