INDEX II. 



283 



Mason (Septimus) on a locomotive for 

 common roads, 269. 



Masters (Maxwell T.) on the relation 

 between pinnate and palmate leaves, 

 148. 



Matthiessen (Dr.) on vesicular structure 

 in, 92. 



Maury (Captain) on the importance of an 

 expedition to the Antarctic regions for 

 meteorological and other scientific pur- 

 poses, 65. 



Mendoza, R. Bridge on the great earth- 

 quake at, March 20, 1861, 187. 



Mercer (John) on madder photographs, 87. 



Metal, Fleeming Jenkin on permanent 

 thermo-electric currents in circuits of 

 one, 39. 



Metals, H. H. Vivian's microscopic obser- 

 vations on the structure of, 34. 



, J. P. Gassiot on the deposit of, from 



the negative terminal of an induction 

 coil during the electrical discharge in 

 vacuo, 38. 



Meteorites, W. Haidinger's attempt to 

 account for the physical condition and 

 the fall of, upon our planet, 15. 



, formation of, 21. 



Micrometers, Sir David Brewster on pho- 

 tographic, 28. 



Miller (Dr.), his address as President of 

 Section B, 75 ; on photographic spectra 

 of the electric light, 87. 



Mineral, aluminous, from the upper chalk 

 near Brighton, Dr. J. H. and G. Glad- 

 stone on, 79. 



Mitchell (J. M.) on the migration of the 

 herring, 149. 



Moffat (Dr.) on atmospheric ozone, 88; 

 on sulphuretted hydrogen as a product 

 of putrefaction, 89. 



Mole, Prof. Owen on the cervical and 

 lumbar vertebrae of the, 152. 



Molesworth (Rev. W. N.) on the progress 

 of cooperation at Rochdale, 225. 



Moon, mountains of the. Dr. Beke on the 

 origin of the designation, 184. 



Moon's mean motion, Rev. E. Hincks on 

 the quantity of the acceleration of the, 

 as indicated by the records of certain 

 ancient eclipses, 22; G. B. Airy's re- 

 marks on, 12. 



Moore (C), notes on two ichthyosauri to 

 be exhibited to the Meeting, 121. 



Morell (J. D.) on the physical and phy- 

 siological processes involved in sensa- 

 tion, 168. 



Morgan (John E.) on an anemometer for 

 registering the maximum force and ex- 

 treme variation of the wind, 72, 



Morin, Dr. Delffs on, 78. 



Morotannic acid. Dr. Delffs on the non- 

 existence of, 78. 



Moroxite, Dr. Voelcker on the composition 

 of crystallized, 93. 



Morton (G. H.) on the pleistocene depo- 

 sits of the district around Liverpool, 120. 



Mouatt (Dr.) on prison dietary in India, 

 170. 



MUller (Prof. H.) on the existence and 

 arrangement of the fovea centralis re- 

 tinas in the eyes of animals, 171. 



Murchison (Sir R. I.), his address as Pre- 

 sident of Section C, 95 ; on the maps and 

 sections recently published by the Geo- 

 logical Survey, 121 ; letter from Sir H. 

 Robinson relating to the journey of 

 Major Sarel, Capt. Blakiston, Dr. Bar- 

 ton, and another, who are endeavouring 

 to pass from China to the North of India, 

 196. 



Navigation, Andrew Henderson on the 

 rise and progress of clipper and steam, 

 on the coasts and rivers of China and 

 India, 258. 



Navy, Dr. Crace Calvert on the chemical 

 composition of some woods employed 

 in the, 77. 



Neild (Alderman) on the price of print- 

 ing-cloth and upland cotton from 1812 

 to 1860, 229. 



Newmarch (William), his address as Pre- 

 sident of Section F, 201 ; on the extent 

 to which sound principles of taxation 

 are embodied in the legislation of the 

 United Kingdom, 230. 



New Zealand, Prof. Owen on the remains 

 of a Plesiosaurian reptile (Plesiosaurus 

 Australis) from the oolitic formation in 

 the middle island of, 122. 



, J. Yates on the excess of water in 



the region of the earth about, lo6. 



Nile, Dr. Beke on the mountains forming 

 the eastern side of the basin of the, 184. 



Norman (Rev. Alfred Merle) on the 

 Crustacea, echinodermata, and zoo- 

 phytes obtained in deep-sea dredging 

 off the Shetland Isles in 1861, 151. 



O'Callaghan (P.) on cromleachs and 

 rocking-stones considered ethuologi-, 

 cally, 187. 



Old red sandstone of South Perthshire, 

 Prof. Harkness on the, 114. 



Orphan children under the care of the. 

 Dublin Protestant orphan societies, on 

 ten years' statistics of the mortality 

 amongst the, by the Rev. W. Caine, 208. 



Orthagoriscus mola. Dr. John Cleland on 

 the anatomy of, 138. 



