INDEX. 



943 



of incandescence of carbon filaments 

 in, W. H. Preece on, 654. 



Gold mining in Nova Scotia, results of 

 past experience in, by E. Gilpin, jun., 

 711. 



Goodwin (Prof. W. L.) and Prof. D. H. 

 Marshall on the physical constants of 

 solutions, 679. 



Gotch (F.) and J. P. Laws on the blood 

 of Limulus polypliemw, 774. 



*Grain elevators, by V. C. Van Horn, 895. 



Grantham (E. B.) on the erosion of the 

 sea-coasts of England and Wales, 238. 



Gray (Prof. Asa) on the characteristics of 

 the North American flora, 555. 



Gray (T.) on the earthquake phenomena 

 of Japan, 241. 



Greely (Lieut. A. W.), recent discoveries 

 in Northern Greenland and in Grinned 

 Land, 808; *exhibition of photographs 

 of Eskimo relics, 919. 



Green (Prof. A. H.) on the exploration of 

 the Eaygill fissure in Lothersdale, 

 Yorkshire, 240. 



Greenland, Northern, recent discoveries 

 in, and in Grinned Land, Lieut. A. W. 

 Greely on, 808. 



Grinned Land, recent discoveries in 

 Northern Greenland and in, Lieut. A. 

 W. Greely on, 808. 



Gneritz (E. P.), North Borneo, 805. 



Giinther (Dr.) on the exploration of 

 Kilima-njaro and the adjoining moun- 

 tains of Eastern Equatorial Africa, 271. 



Gyrostat ic working model of the mag- 

 netic compass, a, Prof. Sir "Wm. Thom- 

 son on, 625. 



Haddon (Prof. A. C.) on the occupation 

 of a table at the zoological station at 

 Naples, 252. 



'•Hague (H. J.), the banking system of 

 Canada, 80S. 



Hale (H.) on the nature and origin of 

 wampum, 910; *on some doubtful or 

 intermediate articulations, 918. 



Haliburtou (E. G.), a search in British 

 North America for lost colonies of 

 Northmen and Portuguese, 810; cus- 

 toms and religious rites of the Black- 

 feet, 920. 



Halifax harbour, Nova Scotia, the geology 

 of, Rev. D. Honeyman on, 714. 



Hall (Prof. J.) on the fossil reticulate 

 sponges constituting the family Dic- 

 tyospongida:, 725 ; on the Lamellibran- 

 chiata fauna of the upper Helderberg, 

 Hamilton, Portage, Chemung, and Cats- 

 hill groups (equivalent to the Lower, 

 Middle, and Upper Devonian of 

 Europe) ; with especial reference to 

 the arrangement of the Monomyaria, 

 and the development and distribution 



of the species of the genus Leptodesma, 

 726. 



Hallett (P.), notes on Niagara, 744. 



•Halliburton (W. B.) and Prof. E. A. 

 Schiifer on the proteids of serum, 785. 



Harcourt (A. G. Vernon) on chemical 

 nomenclature, 39 ; *on an example of 

 chemical equilibrium, 671. 



Harcourt (L. P. Vernon) on the erosion of 

 the sea-coasts of England and Wales, 

 238. 



*Harley (Dr. G.) on the biliary concre- 

 tions, demonstrating a uniformity in 

 the construction of concretions in the 

 animal, vegetable, and mineral king- 

 doms, 783. 



Harmer (S. F.) on the structure and de- 

 velopment of loxosoma, 779. 



Harmonic analysis of tidal observations, 

 report of the Committee for the, 33. 



Harrison (J. Park) on the facial charac- 

 teristics of the races and principal 

 crosses in the British Isles, 294. 



Hartlej- (Prof. W. N.) on the present 

 state of our knowledge of spectrum 

 analysis, 295 ; on wave-length tables 

 of the spectra of the elements, 351. 



Harvie-Brown (J. A.) on the migration 

 of birds, 266. 



Hawkshaw (J. C), the Severn tunnel 

 railway, 884. 



Heat, the loss of, by radiation and con- 

 vection as affected by the dimensions 

 of the cooling bod}', J. T. Bottomley 

 on, 623. 



Heat and electricity, an analogy be- 

 tween, Prof. G. F. Fitzgerald on, 652. 



*Heating buildings by steam from a 

 central source, J. H. Bartlett on, S91. 



'Heating of conductors by electric cur- 

 rents, Prof. G. Forbes on the, 894. 



*Helmsley (W. B.), result of the investi- 

 gations of insular floras, 772. 



Henshaw (G. H.) on the formation of 

 frasil ice, 644. 



Herschel (Prof. A. S.) on meteoric dust, 

 38. 



Heywood (J.) on the teaching of science 

 in elementary schools, 283. 



Hicks (Prof. W. M.) *on some irregular- 

 ities depending on temperature in 

 Baily's experiments on the mean den- 

 sity of the earth, 632 ; *on the ex- 

 pression of the co-ordinate of a point 

 in terms of the potential and line of 

 force at the point, 649 ; *on the pres- 

 sure at a point inside a vortex-ring of 

 uniform vorticity, il>. 



Hill (Eev. E.) on ice-age theories, 723. 



*Hingston (Dr. W. H.) on the climate of 

 Canada and its relations to life and 

 health, 785. 



Hirschfelder (C. A.), anthropological dis- 

 coveries in Canada, 915. 



