944 



INDEX. 



Hoadley (J. C), steam-engine practice 

 in the United States in 1884, 886. 



Home (D. Milne) on meteorological ob- 

 servations on Ben Nevis, 36. 



Honeyman (Rev. D.) on the geology of 

 Halifax harbour, Nova Scotia, 714 ; 

 *on a fish supposed to be of deep-sea 

 origin, 761. 



Hooker (Sir J.) on the exploration of 

 Kilima-njaro and the adjoining moun- 

 tains of Eastern Equatorial Africa, 

 271. 



Hopkinson (Dr. J.) on standards for use 

 in electrical measurements, 29. 



Horsfall (J.) and R. Law, an account of 

 small flint instruments found beneath 

 peat on the Pennine chain, 924. 



Horsley (V.) and Prof. E. A. Schiifer on 

 the functions of the marginal convo- 

 lution, 777. 



♦Hough (F. P..), the future policy of forest 

 management in the United States, 861. 



Howell (W. H.) and Prof. H. N. Martin 

 on the coagulation of blood, 774. 



Hughes (G. P.), some observations on the 

 direct descendants of bos primigenius, 

 in Great Britain, 772; forests— their 

 value meteorologically and as national 

 reserves, 860. 



Hughes (Prof. T. McK.) on the erratic 

 blocks of England, Wales, and Ireland, 

 219. 



Hull (Prof. E.) on the circulation of un- 

 derground waters, 96 ; on the geology 

 of Palestine, 272. 



Hunt (Prof. T. Sterry) on the chemistry 

 of the natural silicates, 679; the eozoic 

 rocks of North America, 727. 



Huntington (Prof. A. K.) on the present 

 state of our knowledge of spectrum 

 analysis, 295. 



Hurlbert (Dr. J. B.), ♦comparison of the 

 climates of the eastern and western 

 hemispheres, 807 ; *some peculiar storms 

 on the North American continent, ib. ; 

 ♦forestry, 872; the forests of Canada, 

 ib. 



*Huron-Iroquois, the, a typical race of 

 American aborigines, by Dr. D. Wilson, 

 915. 



*Hydrogen, liquid, the density of, Prof. 

 J. Dewar on, 679. 



Ice, frasil, the formation of, G. H. Hen- 



shaw on, 644. 

 , melting, the temperature of the 



interior of a block of, J. B. Francis on, 



657. 

 Ice-age theories, Rev. E. Hill on, 723. 

 im Thurn (E. F.), Mount Roraima in 



Guiana, 806. 

 ♦Immigration, population, and pauperism 



in the dominion of Canada, by J. Lowe, 



866. 



Inconveniences of the present mode of 



quoting scientific journals, Dr. H. Boms 



on the, 656. 

 India, the first general census of, by 



T. Saunders, 804. 

 Indians, North American, food-plant3 



used by the, Prof. G. Lawson on, 918. 

 Induction, a lecture experiment on, by 



Prof. Lord Rayleigh, 632. 

 Induction inclinometer adapted for pho- 

 tographic registration, C. Carpmael on 



an, 635. 

 ♦Instructions anthropometriques element- 



aires, by Dr. P. Topinard, 910. 

 Interdependence, the, of the several 



portions of the British Empire, by 



S. Bourne, 851. 

 Internal communication by land and 



water, by C. Walford, 861." 

 Internal temperature of the earth at 



Westville, Nova Scotia, H. S. Poole on 



the, 644. 

 Inu of the western shore and Point 



Barrow, habits and customs of the, by 



Lieut. P. H. Ray, 919. 

 ' Invertebrata, certain groups of, report of 



the Committee for preparing a biblio- 

 graphy of, 270. 

 ♦Irish emigration, by S. Take, S3.". 

 Iron and other metals, some phenomena 



connected with, in the solid and molten 



states, W. J. Millar on, with notes of 



experiments, 653. 

 Iroquois, the customs and language of 



the, remarks on, by Mrs. E. A. Smith, 



914. 

 Isomeric naphthalene derivatives, report 



on the investigation of, 74. 



Japan, the earthquake phenomena of, 

 fourth report on, 241. 



Japp (Dr. F. R.) on chemical nomen- 

 clature, 39. 



Jeffreys (Dr. J. Gwyn) on the concord- 

 ance of the mollusca inhabiting both 

 sides of the North Atlantic and the- 

 intermediate seas, 551. 



Jenkin (Prof.) on .standards for use in 

 electrical measurements, 29. 



Jessop Collection, the, to illustrate the 

 forestry of the United States, in the 

 New York Natural History Museum, 

 A. S. Bickmore on, 778. 



Jews, notes on the races of the, by Dr. 

 A. Neubauer, 917. 



Johnson (Prof.) on the importance of 

 tidal observations in the gulf of St. 

 Lawrence and on the Atlantic coast of 

 the Dominion, 634. 



Johnston's, Mr. H., Kilima-njaro expe- 

 dition, a communication from Sir John 

 Kirk on, 802. 



Johnston-Lavis (Dr. H. J.), notice of a 



