INDEX II. 



277 



Carpenter (Philip P.) on the variations 

 of Tecturella grandis, ]37; on the 

 cosmopolitan operations of the Smith- 

 sonian Institution, 137. 



Casella (Mr.) on a new minimum mercu- 

 rial thermometer proposed hy, 74. 



Cataract, Dr. B. W. Richardson on the 

 artificial production of, 171. 



Caucasus, Captain Cameron on the ethno- 

 logy, geography, and commerce of the, 

 189. 



Cayley (A.) on curves of the third order, 

 2. 



Cells of living beings. Prof. L. S. Beale 

 on the structure and growth of the ele- 

 mentary parts of, 164. 



Census of the United Kingdom in 1861, 

 James T. Hammick on the general 

 results of the, 220. 



Cephalopoda, dibrauchiatc, Albany Han- 

 cock on certain points in the anatomy 

 and physiology of the, 166, 



Chad wick (David) on the progress of 

 Manchester from 1840 to 1860,209; 

 on recent improvements in cotton-gins, 

 2.56. 



Charmouth, Prof. Owen on a dinosaurian 

 reptile (Scelidosaurus Harrisoni) from 

 the lower lias of, 121. 



China, Henry Duckworth on a new com- 

 mercial route to, 194. 



to the North of India, letter from Sir 



II. Robinson, relating to the journey 

 of Major Sarel, Capt. Blakiston, Dr. 

 Barton, and another, who are endea- 

 vouring to pass from, 196. 



and India, Andrew Henderson on 



the rise and progress of clipper and 

 steam navigation on the coasts and 

 rivers of, 258. 



Chloroform accidents, Dr. Charles Kidd 

 on, 167. 



Chorea, Dr. J. TurnbuU on the physiolo- 

 gical and medicinal properties of sul- 

 phate of aniline, and its use in the 

 treatment of, 177. 



Chromascope, and what it reveals, by 

 John Smith, 33 ; the prism and chro- 

 mascope, 33. 



Clark ( Latimer) on the formation of stand- 

 ards of electrical quantity and resist- 

 ance, 37. 



Clarke (Dr. W.) on a revision of national 

 taxation, 216. 



Cleland (Dr. John) on the anatomy of 

 Orthagoriscus mola, the short sunfish, 

 138 ; on a method of craniometry, with 

 observations on the varieties of form of 

 the human skull, 164. 



Cloth, printing-. Alderman Neild on the 



price of, and upland cotton from 1812 

 to 1860, 229. 



Cloud-mirror, J. T. Goddard on the, 61. 



Coal, J. W. Salter on the bivalve shells of 

 the, 131. 



Coal-field, Eurnle}', and its fossil contents, 

 J. T. Wilkinson and J. Whitaker on the, 

 135. 



Coal-gas, AV. Marriott on the separation 

 of ammonia from, 86. 



Cold of Christmas J 860, and its destruct- 

 ive effects, E. J. Lowe on the, 64. 



Collingwood (Cuthbert), a scheme to in- 

 duce the mercantile marine to assist in 

 the advancement of science by the in- 

 telligent collection of objects of natural 

 history from all parts of the globe, 138. 



Colour, observations upon the production 

 of, by the prism, by J. A. Davies, 31. 



, presentations of, produced under 



novel conditions, 32. 



Comets and planets, on the resistance 

 of the ether to the, and on the rotation 

 of the latter, by J. S. S. Glennie, 13. 



Commerce, Charles Thompson on some 

 exceptional articles of, 247. 



Compass, Archibald Smith and F.J.Evans 

 on the eiTect produced on tiie deviation 

 of the, by the length and arrangement 

 of the compass needles, 45. 



Constantinople to Kurrachoe, Col. Sir H. 

 C. Rawlinson on the direct overland 

 telegraph from, 1 97. 



Cooperation at Rochdale, the Rev. W. N. 

 Molesv.'orth on the progress of, 225. 



and its tendencies, Edmund Potter 



on, 230. 



Cooperative stores, their bearing on 

 Athenteums, &c., 248. 



Cotton, W. Danson on Barragudo, from 

 the plains of the Amazon, and on the 

 flax-fibre, of North America, 140. 



, Henry Ashworth on the progress of 



science and art as developed in the 

 bleaching of, at Bolton, 204. 



trade, Thomas Bazley on the, 206. 



, upland, Alderman Neild on the 



price of, from 1812 to 1860, 229. 



Cotton-gins, David Chadwick on recent 

 improvements in, 256. 



Couburn (J.) on the culture of the vine in 

 the open air, 140. 



Craniometry, Dr. John Cleland on a me- 

 thod of, 164. 



Craven, T. W. Barrow's remarks on the 

 bone-caves of, 108. 



Crawfurd (John) on the connexion be- 

 tween ethnology and physical geogra- 

 phy, 177; on the antiquity of man from 

 the evidence of languages, 191. 



