solution, especially the expansion of 
saline solutions, 261. 
Gordon (G. J.) notes of mild steel, 1200. 
Grant (J. F.) on the flora of Caithness, 
1063. 
Grantham (R. B.) on the rate of erosion 
of the sea-coasts of England and Wales, 
404; on the erosion of the coast be- 
tween Lyme Regis and Charmouth, 
422; at Brading Harbour, &c., 429; at 
Pagham, 432; from Worthing to Lanc- 
ing, 433; from Lancing to Shoreham, 
ib.; from St. Leonards to Hastings, 
438. 
*Gray (Capt.) on a model of the whale, 
1059. 
Gray (T.) on the earthquake phenomena 
of Japan, 362; on the measurement of 
the intensity of the horizontal compo- 
nent of the earth’s magnetic field, 898. 
Great Trigonometrical Survey of India, 
account of the levelling operations of 
the, by Major A. W. Baird, 1123. 
Greek customs, insular, by J. T. Bent, 
1214. 
Greek islands, ancient tombs in the, J. T. 
Bent on, 1217. 
Greig (J. B.), policy in taxation, 1179. 
Griffith (G.) on the formation of a pure 
spectrum by Newton, 940. 
Groves (C. E.) on chemical nomencla- 
ture, 262. 
Groves’s gas battery, some actions of a, 
Prof. W. Ramsay on, 965. 
Gunn (J.) on rocks of central Caithness, 
1030. 
Giinther (Dr.) on the exploration of 
Kilima-njaro and the adjoining moun- 
tains of Eastern Equatorial Africa, 681. 
*Guthrie (Prof.) on physical molecular 
equivalents, 985. 
Gymnotus electricus, the viscera of the, 
Prof. Cleland on, 1068. 
Haddon (Prof. A. C.) on the occupation 
of a table at the zoological station at 
Naples, 466. 
Hale (H.) on the north-western tribes of 
the Dominion of Canada, 696; on the 
Blackfoot tribes, id. 
Haliburton (R. G.) on the North-western 
tribes of the Dominion of Canada, 696. 
Halliburton (Dr. W. D.), a comparative 
view of the albuminous substances 
contained in the blood of vertebrate 
and invertebrate animals, 1077. 
Hamilton (Prof. D. J.), is the commis- 
sural theory of the corpus callosum 
correct ? 1054. 
Happaway Cavern, Torquay, by W. Pen- 
gelly, 1219. 
—, the human remains found in, Dr. 
J. G. Garson on, 1220. 
Harcourt (A. G. Vernon) on standards of 
INDEX. 
white light, 61; on chemical nomen- 
clature, 262; photometry with the 
pentane standard, 916. 
Harcourt (L. F. Vernon) on the rate of 
erosion of the sea-coasts of England 
and Wales, 404. 
Harker (Alfred) on slaty cleavage and 
allied rock-structures, with special 
reference to the mechanical theories 
of their origin, 813. 
Harker (Prof. Allen) on the zoocytium or 
gelatinous matrix of Ophrydiwm versa- 
tile, 1074; *on the coloration of the 
anterior segments in the Malanide, 
1098. 
Harmonic analysis of tidal observations, 
third report of the Committee for the, 
35. 
*Harris (J. H.), the American system of 
oil pipe lines, 1193. 
Hartley (Prof.) on the ultra-violet spark 
spectra emitted by metallic elements 
and their combinations under varying 
conditions, 276 ; on wave-length tables 
of the spectra of the elements and 
compounds, 288. 
Harvie-Brown (J. A.) on the migration of 
birds, 685. 
Haycraft (Prof. J. B,), a new theory of 
the sense of taste, 1059. 
Heath (T.) on the supposed change of 
climate in the British Isles within 
recent years, 922. 
Hedgehog, the structure of the intestine 
in the, Dr. J. A. McWilliam on, 1078. 
Heliographic latitude and longitude of 
sun-spots, determination of the, by 
Prof. A. W. Thomson, 931. 
Helmholtz’s views on electrolysis, Prof. 
Schuster on, 977. 
Hepper (Major A. C.) on the erosion of 
the coast at Deal, 440. 
Herschel (Prof. A. 8.) on meteoric dust, 
34; on underground temperature, 93. 
—— and Prof. C. P. Smith on the use of 
bisulphide of carbon prisms for cases 
of extreme spectroscopic dispersion, 
and their results in gaseous spectra, 
942. 
Heywood (J.) on the teaching of science 
in elementary schools, 692. 
Hicks (Dr. H.) on the Fynnon Beuno and 
Cae Gwyn bone caves, North ‘Wales, 
1021. 
Hicks (Prof. W. M.) *on Boltzmann’s 
theorem, 905; on the constitution of 
the luminiferous ether on the vortex 
atom theory, 930. 
*High speed friction driving gear, a new 
form of, Prof. J. A. Ewing on, 1203. 
Highland controversy, the, the geology 
of Durness and Eriboll, with special 
reference to, by B., N. Peach and J. 
Horne, 1027. 
