INDEX. 
Japan, the earthquake phenomena of, 
report on, 211. 
Jeffery (H. M.) on curves of the fourth 
class, with a triple and a single focus, 
412. 
Jeffreys (Dr. Gwyn) on the Scottish 
zoological station, 233. 
Jenkin (Prof. H. C. F.) on standards for 
use in electrical measurements, 41; 
nest gearing, 387. 
Johnston (H. H.),a visit to Mr. Stanley’s 
stations on the Congo, 593. 
Johnston-Lavis (H. J.), preliminary no- 
tice of the earthquake of 1881 in the 
island of Ischia, 499; preliminary no- 
tice of the earthquake of July 1883 in 
the island of Ischia, 501. 
Jones (Prof, T, Rupert) on the fossil phyl- 
lopoda of the palzozoic rocks, 215. 
*Jordan canal, the proposed, by T. 
Saunders, 657. 
*Jordan channel, T. Saunders on the, 591. 
*Jordan valley, Rev. Canon Tristram on 
the, 591. 
Kairwan, E. Rae on, 591. 
Kajunah district, Yassin and the, by Dr. 
R. G. Latham, 566. 
Kermode (P, M. C.) on the migration of 
birds, 229. 
Kilimanjaro and the adjoining mountains 
of Eastern Equatorial Africa, report on 
the%exploration of, 228. 
Kinahan (G. H.) on explorations in caves 
in the carboniferous limestone in the 
south of Ireland, 132. 
*King crab, the, and the scorpion, by 
Prof. E. Ray Lankester, 541. 
*Kinnear (J. B.), a new method for dis- 
infecting sewage and recovering am- 
monia from it, 474. 
Knowles (W. J.) on basalt apparently 
overlying post-glacial beds, co. Antrim, 
497 ; on the antiquity of man in Ire- 
land, 562. 
Koeboes and other tribes of Sumatra, H. 
O. Forbes on the, 565. 
‘Krao,’ the so-called missing link, by J. 
Park Harrison, 575. 
Labyrinthodonts, the occurrence of re- 
mains of, in the Yoredale rocks of 
Wensleydale, J. W. Davis on, 492. 
Lamé’s differential equation, Prof. F. 
Lindemann on, 351. 
Lamp, a, giving a constant light, A. 
Vernon Harcourt on, 426. 
Lancashire, North, a comparison of, in 
1836 and 1883, by Hyde Clarke, 631. 
Lankester (Prof. E. Ray) on the Scottish 
zoological station, 233 ; on the occupa- 
tion of a table at the zoological station 
at Naples, 234; Address by, to the 
Biological Section, 512; on a young 
669 
specimen of the grey seal (H. gryphon) 
from Boscastle, Cornwall, 529; *on 
green oysters, 540 ; *new British river- 
worms, 541; *the king crab and the 
scorpion, id. 
Lansdell (Rev. Dr.),a journey in Russian 
Central Asia, including Kulja, Bokhara, 
and Khiva, 592. 
Latham (B.) on the influence of baro- 
metric pressure on the discharge of 
water from springs, 495. 
Latham (Dr. R. G.), Yassin and the 
Kajunah district, 566; on the words 
Celt, German, and Slavonian, their 
misinterpretation and its results, 567. 
| Lawrence (Rev. F.) on the survey of 
Eastern Palestine, 308. 
Lawson (Insp.-Gen.) on the work of the 
Anthropometric Committee, 253. 
Lebour (Prof. G. A.) on underground 
temperature, 45; on the circulation of 
underground waters, 147. 
Lee (J. E.) on the erratic blocks of _Eng- 
land, Wales, and Ireland, 136. 
Lemstrém’s recent auroral experiments 
in Lapland, J. R. Capron on, 439. 
Levi (Prof. L.) on the work of the An- 
thropometric Committee, 253; recent 
changes in the distribution of wealth 
in relation to the incomes of the labour- 
ing classes, 353; *on free libraries, 605. 
Lindemann (Prof. F.) on Lamé’s differen- 
tial equation, 351. 
*Liquid marsh gas, Prof. Dewar on, 464. 
Liveing (Prof.) and Prof. Dewar on sun- 
spots and the chemical elements in the 
sun, 455. 
Local science societies and the minor 
pre-historic remains of Britain, by R. 
Meldola, 571. 
Local Scientific Societies Committee, re- 
port of the, 318. 
Lockyer (J. N.) on the proposed publica- 
tion by the Meteorological Society of 
the Mauritius of daily synoptic charts 
of the Indian Ocean from the year 
1861, 118. 
Locomotive engines, compound, F. W. 
Webb on, 647. 
Lodge (A.), note on a simple method of 
solving the general equation of the 
fourth degree, 408. 
Lodge (Dr. O. J.) on standards for use in 
electrical measurements, 41. 
Loess deposits of the valley of the Rhine, 
recent opinions on, by M. Stirrup, 497: 
Logical principle, exposition of a, as dis- 
closed by the algebra of logic, but 
overlooked by the ancient logicians, 
by Dr. E. Schréder, 412. 
‘Loughton’ or ‘Cowper’s’ Camp, the 
ancient earthwork in Epping Forest 
known as the, report on, 243, 
Lowe (HE. J.) on some newly-discovered 
