870 



INDEX. 



Electrolytes, the conductivity of, contri- 

 bution to our knowledge of the action of 

 fluidity on, by Dr. S. Arrhenius, 344. 



♦Electrolytic conduction and residual 

 affinity, Prof. Armstrong on, 308. 



Electrolytic conductivity, diathermancy 

 and, S. Bidwell on, 309. 



Electro-metallurgy, dynamos for, by Prof. 

 G. Forbes, 815. 



♦Elements, some probable new, A.' Pringle 

 on, 577. 



Ellis (W.) on the best means of com- 

 paring and reducing magnetic obser- 

 vations, 64. 



Endurance of metals, the, under repeated 

 and varying stresses, and the proper 

 working stresses on lailway bridges 

 and other structures subject to varying 

 loads, report on, 284. 



English railway administration, J. S. 

 Jeans on some defects in, 768. 



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, second 

 report on, 847. 



Erratic blocks of England, Wales, and 

 Ireland, fourteenth report on the, 223. 



♦Essential oils, the : a study in optical 

 chemistry, by Dr. J. H. Gladstone, 599. 



Estuary water, the chemistry of, Dr. 

 H. R. Mill on, 598. 



Etheridge (R.) on the fossil phyllopoda 

 of the palfEOZoic rocks, 229 ; on the 

 volcanic phenomena of Japan, 413. 



* and Dr. H. Woodward, exhibition 



of some organisms me.t with in the 

 clay-ironstone nodules of the coal 

 measures in the neighbourhood of 

 Dudley, 628. 



Europeans, can they become acclimatised 

 in tropical Africa? by Dr. II. W. 

 Felkin, 729. 



Evans (A. T.), the fossiliferous bunter 

 pebbles contained in the drift at Mose- 

 ley, &c., 627. 

 Evans (Dr. J.) on the work of the Cor- 

 responding Societies Committee, 285. 

 Everett (Prof.) on standards for use in 



electrical measurements, 145. 

 Everill (Capt. H. C), recent exploration 



in New Guinea, 730. 

 Ewart (Prof. C.) on the establishment of 

 a marine biological station at Granton, 

 Scotland, 251 ; on the researches on 

 food-fishes and invertebrates at the 

 St. Andrews marine laboratory, 268. 



Faraday's law of electrolysis with refe- 

 rence to silver and copper, the verifica- 

 tion of, W. N. Shaw on, 318. 



Felkin (Dr. R. W.), Can Europeans 

 become acclimatised in tropical Africa ? 

 729. 



Fellows (F. P.), the cost of shipbuilding 

 in H.M. dockyards, 779. 



Fern prothallia, the cultivation of, for 

 laboratory purposes, J. Morley on, 707. 



Ffynnon Beuno Cave, on the exploration 

 of, 222. 



♦Fiji islands, the, by J. E. Mason, 731. 



Fitz-Gerald (D. G.) on lithanode, 553. 



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

 use in electrical measurements, 145 ; 

 on electrolysis in its physical and 

 chemical bearings, 308. 



and Mr. Trouton on the accuracy of 



Ohm's law in electrolytes, 312. 



Fitzpatrick (T. C.) on the application of 

 alternating currents to the determina- 

 tion of the conductivity of electrolytes, 

 328. 



and R. T. Glazebrook on the values 



of some standard resistance coils, 147. 



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

 in electrical measurements, 145 ; on 

 electrolysis in its physical and chemical 

 bearings, 308. 



♦Fleming (S. F.), universal time : a 

 system of notation for the twentieth 

 century, 735. 



♦Flora of Ceylon, Dr. Trimen on the, 688. 



Food-fishes and invertebrates, report of 

 the Committee for continuing the re- 

 searches on, at the St. Andrews 

 marine laboratorj', 268. 



Forbes (Prof. G.) on standards of light, 

 39 ; ♦thermopile and galvanometer 

 combined, 527 ; on magnetic hysteresis, 

 550 ; dynamos for electro-metallurgy, 

 815. 



Forced draught, by J. R. Fothergill, 

 805. 



Ford (W. C), the public land policy of 

 the United States, 761. 



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

 England, Wales, and Ireland, 223. 



Fossil fish in the new red sandstone 

 (Upper Keuper) in Warwickshire, Rev. 

 P. B. Brodie on the discovery of, 629. 



Fossil phyllopoda of the palseozoic rocks, 

 fourth report on the, 229. 



Fossil plants of the tertiary and secondary 

 beds of the United Kingdom, second 

 report on the, 241. 



Fossil tree, a large, in the lower coal- 

 measures at Clayton, near Bradford, 

 notes on the discovery of, by S. A. 

 Adamson, 628. 



Fossiliferous bunter pebbles, the, con- 

 tained in the drift at Moseley, &c., by 

 A. T. Evans, 627. 



Foster (Dr. C. Le Neve) on manganese 

 mining in Merionethshire, 665. 



Foster (Prof. G. C.) on standards of light, 

 39 ; on standards for use in electrical 

 measurements, 145 ; on electrolysis in 

 its physical and chemical bearings, 308. 



