INDEX. 
Gardiner (W.) on the continuity of the 
protoplasm through the walls of vege- 
table cells, 534. 
Garson (Dr.) on the facial characteristics 
of the races and principal crosses in 
the British Isles, 306; on the cranial 
characters of the inhabitants of Timor- 
laut, 566; anthropometry, 569. 
*Gas-making, the employment of limed 
coal in, J. A. Wanklyn on, 471. 
Geikie (Prof.) on underground tempera- 
ture, 45. 
General equation of the fourth degree, 
note on a simple method of solving 
the, by A. Lodge, 408. 
Generalised hypergeometric series, Prof. 
A. R. Forsyth on a, 408. 
Geographical Section, Address by Lieut.- 
Col. H. H. Godwin-Austen to the, 576. 
Geological age of the North Atlantic 
Ocean, Prof. E. Hull on the, 494. 
Geological relations and mode of preser- 
vation of Eozoon canadense, Principal 
J. W. Dawson on the, 494. 
Geological Section, Address by Prof. W. 
C. Williamson to the, 475. 
Geological sections within forty miles’ 
radius of Southport, notes on, by C. E. 
De Rance, 489. 
Geology of the Troad, J. S. Diller on the, 
508. 
Germ-theory of disease, the, considered 
from the natural history point of view, 
Dr. W. B. Carpenter on, 529. 
German, Celt, and Slavonian, the words, 
their misinterpretation, and its results, 
Dr. R. G. Latham on, 567. 
Germanic and Rhetian elements, the, in 
Switzerland, by Dr. J. Beddoe, 574. 
Glacier-motion in 1883, some measure- 
ments of, Prof. A. Schuster on, 432. 
Gladstone (Dr. J. H.) on meteoric dust, 
126; on the work of the Anthropo- 
metric Committee, 253; on the work- 
ings of the proposed revised New Code, 
and of other legislation affecting the 
teaching of science in elementary 
schools, 309; Address by, to the Che- 
mical Section, 448; the length of the 
prismatic spectrum as a test of chemical 
purity, 461. 
—— and A. Tribe, electrolysis of dilute 
sulphuric acid in secondary batteries, 
464, 
Glaisher (J.) on underground tempera- 
ture, 45; on mathematical tables, 118 ; 
on the circulation of underground 
waters, 147; on the survey of Hastern 
Palestine, 308. 
Glaisher (J. W. L.) on mathematical 
tables, 118. 
Glazebrook (R. T.) on standards for use in 
electrical measurements, 41. 
Glendale, Northumberland, the former | 
667 
physical condition of, G. P. Hughes 
on, 498. 
Godwin-Austen (Lieut.-Col. H. H.) on the 
natural history of Socotra and the ad- 
jacent highlands of Arabia and Somali 
Land, 227; Address by, to the Geo- 
graphical Section, 576. 
Gold, the mobility of, in molten lead, 
Prof. W. C. Roberts on, 464. 
, method of measuring changes in 
the value of, by J. L. Shadwell, 626. 
versus goods, by J. B. Martin, 625. 
Gray (‘T.) on the earthquake phenomena 
of Japan, 211. 
Greathead (J. H.), the injector hydrant 
for fire-extinction, 635. 
Green (Prof. A. H.) on the exploration of 
Raygill fissure, Yorkshire, 133. 
Greenhill (Prof.), curves of air resist- 
ance, 656. 
Gunn (J.) on the causes of change of 
climature during long periods of time, 
and of coincident changes of fauna 
and flora, 509. 
Giinther (Dr.) on the natural history of 
Socotra and the adjacent highlands of 
Arabia and Somali Land, 227; on the 
exploration of Kilimanjaro and the 
adjoining mountains of Hastern Equa- 
torial Africa, 228. 
Guthrie (E.), the cotton trade: its con- 
dition and prospects, 601. 
*Gyrostatic determination of the north 
and south line, andsthe latitude of any 
place, by Sir W. Thomson, 405. 
Haan (Dr. D. B. de) on some indefinite 
integrals that contain the elliptic in- 
tegrals Hand F, 440. 
*Haddon (Prof. A. C.) on the budding of 
polyzoa, 529. 
Haliburton (R. G.), primitive astrono- 
mical traditions as to paradise, 572. 
Hallett (H. S.) on the advance of the 
southern Chinese, 598. 
Hancock (Dr. N.) on patent legislation, 
316. 
Hancock (W.) on the volcanic and earth- 
quake regions of Central America, with 
observations on recent phenomena, 
594; on North Formosa, 597. 
*Handwriting, some effects of brain dis- 
turbance on the, Dr. W. H. Stone on, 
544. 
Harbours of refugé, by R. Capper, 658. 
Harcourt (A. Vernon) on fixing a stan- 
dard of white light, 127; on a lamp 
giving a constant light, 426. 
Harmonic analysis of tidal observations, 
report of the Committee for the, 49. 
Harrison (J. Park) on the facial charac- 
teristics of the races and principal 
crosses in the British Isles, 306 ; onthe 
relative length of the first three toes of 
