280 



REPORT — 1861. 



light by certain gases, 79 ; on an alu- 

 minous mineral from the upper chalk 

 near Brighton, 79. 



Glaisher (James) on a deep-sea thei'mo- 

 meter invented by Henry Johnson, 58 ; 

 on a deep-seapressure-gauge invented by 

 Henry Johnson, 59 ; on a daily weather 

 map, on Admiral FitzRoy's paper on 

 the Royal Charter storm, and on some 

 meteorological documents relating to 

 Mr. Green's balloon ascents, 61. 



Glass, H. Deane on a particular decom- 

 position of ancient, 78. 



Glenuie (J. S. Stuart) on the resistance 

 of the ether to the comets and planets, 

 and on the rotation of the latter, 13; 

 on the application of the principle of 

 the conservation of force to the me- 

 chanical explanation of the correlation 

 offerees, 20. 



Goddard (J. T.) on the cloud-mirror and 

 sunshine- recorder, GI. 



Gold, Dr. Smith on certain difficulties in 

 the way of separating, from quartz, 92. 



of North Wales, T. A. Readwin on 



the, 129. 



Gordon (Rev. C. R.) on the laws dis- 

 coverable as to the formation of land 

 on the globe, 112. 



Gorilla, Dr. J. E. Gray on the height of 

 the, 144, 



Gossage (W.) on the history of the alkali 

 manufacture, 80. 



Gould (C), results of the geological survey 

 of Tasmania, 112. 



Granite, A. Bryson on the aqueous origin 

 of, 110. 



, J. G. Marshall on the relation of the 



Eskdale granite at Bootle to the schis- 

 tose rocks, with remarks on the general 

 metamorphic origin of, 117. 



Granites of Dartmoor, W. Pengelly on the 

 age of the, 127, 



Granitic rocks of Donegal, R. H, Scott 

 on the, 131. 



Gray (Dr. J. E.) on the height of the 

 Gorilla, 144. 



Green (A. H.) on the faults of a portion 

 of the Lancashire coal-field, 113. 



Greenland, South, on active and extinct 

 glaciers in, by Colonel ShafFner, 198, 



Greg (R. P.), some considerations on 

 M. Haidinger's communication on the 

 origin and fall of aerolites, 13, 



Gregory (Frank), exploration of N.W, 

 Australia, 197. 



Griffin (J. J.) on the construction of gas- 

 burners for chemical use, 81. 



Grindon (L. H.) on the flora of Man- 

 chester, 145. 



Gun-boats, Dr. Eddy on a class of, capable 

 of engaging armour-plated ships at 

 sea, 257. 



Haan (Bierens de) on definite integrals, 4. 



Hagen (Dr.), comparison of fossil insects 

 of England and Bavaria, 113, 



Haidinger, R. P, Greg on his communi- 

 cation on the origin and fall of aero- 

 lites, 13, 



Haidinger (Professor W.), an attempt to 

 account for the physical condition and 

 the fall of meteorites upon our planet, 

 15 ; on the present state of the Imperial 

 Geological Institution of Vienna, 121, 



Hair, Dr. John Davy on the, being sub- 

 ject or not to a sudden change of 

 colour, 166, 



, human, W. Dauson on the manu- 

 facture of the, as an article of consump- 

 tion and general use, 217, 



Hamilton (Sir W, R.) on geometrical 

 rests in space, 4. 



Hammick (James T.) on the general 

 results of the census of the United 

 Kingdom in 1861, 220, 



Hancock (Albany) on certain points in 

 the anatomy and physiology of the 

 dibranchiate cephalopoda, 166. 



Harkuess (Prof) on the old red sandstone 

 of South Perthshire, 114; on the sand- 

 stones and their associated deposits of 

 the valley of the Eden and the Cumber- 

 land plain, 115. 



Haworth (John) on a perambulator and 

 street railway, 258. 



Hector (Dr. James) on the capabilities for 

 settlement of the central parts of British 

 North America, 195. 



Henderson (Andrew) on the rise and 

 progress of clipper and steam navigation 

 on the coasts and rivers of China and 

 India, 258. 



Hennessy (Professor) on a probable cause 

 of the diurnal variation of magnetic 

 dip and declination, 39; on the con- 

 nexion between storms and vertical 

 disturbances of the atmosphere, 61, 



Herring, J. M. Mitchell on the migration 

 of the, 149. 



fishery, statistics of the, 156. 



Hey wood(J.) on the inspection of endowed 

 educational institutions, 222. 



Higgins (Rev, H. H.) on the arrangement 

 of hardy herbaceous plants adopted in 

 the Botanic Gardens, Liverpool, 145. 



Hincks (Rev. Edward) on the quantity of 

 the acceleration of the moon's mean 

 motion, as indicated by the record of 

 certain ancient eclipses, 22 ; remarks 



