INDEX. 



941 



* Emigration, female, by Mrs. Burt, 86G. 

 * , , by Mrs. Joyce, 866. 



* , Irish, by S. Tnke, 835. 



English locomotive engineering, A. 



McDonnell and J. A. F. Aspinall on, 



890. 

 *Enteroj>neusta, the presence in the, of 



a structure comparable with the noto- 



chord of the Churdatu, W. Bateson on, 



782. 

 Eozoic rocks of North America, the, by 



Dr. T. Sterry Hunt, 727. 

 Equatorial clock-movement, an electric 



control for an, the Earl of Eosse on, 



636. 

 Erosion of the sea-coasts of England and 



Wales, the rate of, and the influence of 



the artificial abstraction of shingle or 



other material in that action, report 



on, 238. 

 Erratic blocks of England, Wales, and 



Ireland, twelfth report on the, 219. 

 Eskimo, the range of the, in space and 



time, by Prof. W. Boyd Dawkins, 898. 

 ♦Eskimo relics, exhibition of photographs 



of, by Lieut. A. W. Greely, 919. 

 Etheridge (R.) on the fossil phyllopoda 



of the palreozoic rocks, 75 ; on the 



earthquake phenomena of Japan, 241. 

 Evans (Capt. (Sir F. O.) on the erosion of 



the sea-coasts of England and AY ales, 



238. 

 Evaporation and dissociation, Prof. W. 



Ramsay and Dr. S. Young on, 675. 

 Everett (Prof.) on standards for use in 



electrical measurements, 29. 

 Explosions, spectroscopic studies of, by 



Profs. Liveing and Dewar, 672. 

 Explosions in gases, the velocity of, H. B. 



Dixon on, 688. 

 Eyesight, observations on, by C. Roberts, 



279": 



Facial characteristics of the races and 

 principal crosses in the British Isles, 

 report of the Committee for defining 

 the, and for obtaining illustrative pho- 

 tographs with a view to their publica- 

 tion, 294. 



Factory Acts, the, by R. W. Cooke- 

 Taylor, 853. 



Faunas, fresh-water, the origin of, Prof. 

 AV. J. Sollas on, 760. 



*Female emigration, by Miss M. Rye, 

 866. 



* , by Mrs. Burt, 866. 



* , by Mrs. Joyce, 866. 



Fire extinction, automatic sprinklers for, 

 by C. J. H. Woodbury, 894. 



*Fish, a, supposed to be of deep-sea 

 origin, Rev. D. Honeynian on, 761. 



, some remains of, from the Upper 



Silurian rocks of Pennsylvania, Prof. 

 E. AY. Claypole on, 733. 



Fisheries of Canada, the, by L Z. Joncas 



854. 

 Fitzgerald (Trof. G. F.) on standards for 

 use in electrical measurements, 29 ; on 

 an analogy between heat and elec- 

 tricity, 652. 

 Fleming (Dr. J. A.) on standards for use 



in electrical measurements, 29. 

 Flint instruments, small, found beneath 

 peat on the Pennine chain, an account 

 of, by R. Law and J. Horsfall, 924. 

 *Flood regulators, J. Dillon on, 896. 

 Floras, the more ancient land, of the old 

 and new worlds, Sir AV. Dawson on, 

 738. 

 * , insular, results of the investiga- 

 tions of, by AY. B. Helmsley, 772. 

 *Flow of water through turbines and 



screw propellers, A. Rigg on the, 895. 

 Flower (Prof.) on the facial character- 

 istics of the races and principal crosses 

 in the British Isles, 294. 

 Fluxion-structure in till, by H. Miller, 



720. 

 Food plants used by the North American 



Indians, Prof. G. Lawson on, 918. 

 Forbes (Prof. G.) *on the velocity of light 

 of different colours, 653 ; *on the heat- 

 ing of conductors by electric currents, 

 894. 

 Fordham (H. G.) on the erratic blocks of 



England, AVales, and Ireland, 219. 

 ^Forest management, the future policy of, 

 in the United States, by F. B. Hough, 

 861. 

 Forest trees, Canadian, the distribution 



of, by A. T. Drummond, 855. 

 ♦Forestry, by Dr. J. B. Hurlbert, 872. 

 Forests — their value meteorologically and 

 as national reserves, by G. P. Hughes, 

 860. 

 Forests of Canada, the, by Dr. R. Bell, 

 856. 



-, the, by Dr. J. B. Hurlbert, 872. 



♦Forth bridge, the, by B. Baker, 8S4. 

 Fossil fishes, new and remarkable, the 

 recent discovery of, in the carbonifer- 

 ous and devonian rocks of Ohio and 

 Indiana, Prof. J. S. Newberry on, 724. 

 Fossil phyllopoda of the palaeozoic rocks, 



second report on the, 75. 

 Fossil polyzoa, fifth and last report on, 

 97 ; historical labours on the group, 

 151 ; bibliography, 214. 

 Fossil reticulate sponges constituting the 

 family Dictyospongid;e, Prof. J. Hall 

 on the, 725. 

 Foster (A. Le Neve) on the determination 

 of a gauge for the manufacture of 

 various small screws, 2S7. 

 Foster (Dr. C. Le Neve), AA'hat is a 

 mineral vein or lode ? 732 ; on the 

 relative dangers of coal and metal 

 mining in the United Kingdom, 868. 



