INDEX II. 



285 



Rankin (Rev. T.), meteorological obser- 

 vations at Huggate, Yorkshire, 73. 



Rankine (Prof. \V. J. M.) on the resist- 

 ance of ships, 263, 264. 



Rawlinson (Col. Sir H. C.) on the direct 

 overland telegraph from Constantinople 

 to Kurrachee, 197. 



Readwin (T. A.) on the gold of North 

 Wales, 129. 



Reed (E. J.) on the iron-cased ships of 

 the British Navy, 232. 



Reid (Peter), statistics of the herring 

 fishery, 150. 



Remak (Prof.) on the influence of the 

 sympathetic nerve on voluntary mus- 

 cles, as witnessed in the treatment of 

 progressive miiscular atrophy by se- 

 condary electric currents, 171. 



Respiration and digestion. Dr. G. Robin- 

 son on the connexion between the 

 functions of, 173. 



Resuscitation, Dr. B. W. Richardson's' 

 physiological researches on, 1 72. 



Retina, Sir David Brewster on the com- 

 pensation of impressions moving over 

 the, 29 ; on the optical study of the, 29. 



Revenue, Charles Tiiompson on some ex- 

 ceptional articles of commei'ce, and un- 

 desirable sources of, 2 17. 



Richardson (Dr. B. VV.) on the artificial 

 production of cataract, 171 ; researches 

 on resuscitation, 172. 



Richardson (Mr.) on the details of the 

 carboniferous limestone, as laid open 

 by the railway cutting and tunnel near 

 Almondsbury, North of Bristol, fSO. 



Richson (Rev. Canon) on the income-tax, 

 240. 



Roberts (William) on the solvent power 

 of strong and weak solutions of the alka- 

 line carbonates on u:ic acid calculi, 90. 



Robertson (Charles) on the cervical and 

 occipital vertebrse of osseous fishes, 1 72. 



Robinson (Dr. George) on the connexion 

 between the functions of respiration 

 and digestion, 173. 



Robinson (Sir Hercules), letter from, rela- 

 ting to thejourneyof iMajor Sarel, Capt. 

 Blakiston, Dr. Barton, and another, who 

 are endeavouring to pass from China to 

 the North of India, 190. 



Robinson (J.) on the application of work- 

 shop tools to the construction of steam- 

 engines and other machinery, 264. 



Rochdale, the Rev. W. N. Molesworth on 

 the progress of cooperation at, 225. 



Rogers (Prof. J. E. T.), can patents be 

 defended on economical grounds? 240; 

 on the definition and incidence of taxa- 

 tion, 240; on prices in England, 1582- 



] 620, and the effect of the American 

 discoveries upon them during that pe- 

 riod, 269. 



RoUeston (Dr.) on the anatomy of Ptero- 

 pus, 173; on some points in the ana- 

 tomy of Insecti vora, 1 73 ; on the homo- 

 logies of the lobes of the liver in Mam- 

 malia, 174. 



Roscoe (Professor) on perchloric acid and 

 its hydrates, 91. 



Rose (Thomas) on presentations of colour 

 produced under novel conditions, with 

 their assumed relation to the received 

 theory of light and colour, 32. 



Russell (Dr.) on vesicular structure in 

 copper, 92 ; on an apparatus for the 

 rapid separation and measurement of 

 gases, 95. 



Russell (W. H. L.) on the calculus of 

 functions, with remarks on the theory 

 of electricity, 9. 



Rotation, Professor Sylvester on the in- 

 volution of axes of, 12. 



Salter (J. W.) on the nature of Sigillarias, 

 and on the bivalve shells of the coal, 

 131. 



Sandstones, Prof. Harkness on the, and 

 their associated deposits of the Valley 

 of the Eden and the Cumberland plain, 

 115. 



Scelidosaurus Hanisoni, Prof. Owen on, 

 from the lower lias of Charmouth, 

 121. 



Schools, national, in Liverpool, Rev. A. 

 Hume on the condition of, as compared 

 with the population, 1861, 223. 



Science, elementary, Captain Donnelly 

 on the nature and results of the aid 

 now granted by the State towards the 

 instruction of the industrial classes in, 

 217. 



Sclater (P. L.) on the late increase of our 

 knowledge of the struthious birds, 

 158. 



Scott (R. H.) on the granitic rocks of 

 Donegal, and the minerals associated 

 therewith, 131. 



Sea thermometer, on a deep-, 58 ; pres- 

 sure-gauge, 59, 



, C. W. Siemens on a bathometer, 



or instrument to indicate the depth of 

 the, on board ship without submerging 

 a line, 73. 



Seeley (Harry) on the Elsworth rock, 

 and the clay above it, 132. 



Sensation, J. D. Morell on the physical 

 and physiological processes involved in, 

 168. 



ShafFner (Colonel) on the Spitzbergen 



