INDEX II. 
*Flint instruments from Hoxne, Mr. 
Doughty on, 72. 
Fog, Dr. Gladstone on the distribution 
of, round the coasts of the British 
Islands, 31. 
Foot (F. J.) on the geology of Burren, 
co. Clare, 72; on a botanical chart of 
the barony of Burren, co. Clare, 98. 
Foot-clothing, James Dowie on the loss 
of muscular power arising from the 
ordinary, now worn, and on the means 
required to obviate this loss, 125. 
*Foraminifera, Dr. Fritsch on some mo- 
dels of, 72. 
Fort William, Inverness-shire, J. Gwyn 
Jeffreys on an ancient sea-bed beach 
near, 73. 
Fossils of the boulder-clay in Caithness, 
C. W. Peach on the, 838. 
*Fritsch (Dr.) on some models of Fora- 
minifera, 72. 
Fungi, Dr. Phipson on the existence of 
aniline in certain, which become blue 
in contact with the air, 51. 
Galton (F.) on the “ Boussole Burnier,” 
a new French pocket instrument for 
measuring vertical and horizontal an- 
gles, 30; European weather-charts 
or December 1861, 30. 
Garner’(Robert) on the skull-sutures in 
connexion with the superficies of the 
brain, 126; on pearls—their parasitic 
origin, 126; on an albino variety of 
crab, with some observations on 
crustaceans, and on the effect of 
light, 126. 
Gases, James Croll on the cohesion of, 21. 
Gassiot (J. P.) on the mode of preparing 
carbonic acid vacua in large glass 
vessels, 42. 
Generation, spontaneous, James Samuel- 
son on, 119 
Geology, Australian, contributions to, 
by Charles Moore, 83. 
Geometrical curves, H. Johnston’s in- 
strument for describing, 3. 
Gérard (Jules), exploration dans l’Afri- 
que centrale, de Serre-Leone a Alger, 
par Timbuctu, 146. 
German Ocean, C. B. Rose on some 
mammalian remains from the bed of 
the, 91. 
Gibb (Dr. George D.) on the normal 
position of the epiglottis as deter- 
mined by the laryngoscope, 128; on 
the physiological effects of the bro- 
mide of ammonium, 128. 
*Gibbs (John) on the inflorescence of 
plants, 98, 
203 
Gilbert (Dr.) on the effects of different 
manures on the mixed herbage of 
grass land, 191. 
Glacier phenomena of the valley of the 
Upper Indus, Capt. Godwin-Austen 
on the, 67. 
Gladstone (Dr.) on the distribution of 
fog round the coast of the British Is- 
lands, 31; on the essential oil of bay 
and other aromatic oils, 43; on the 
means of observing the lines of the 
solar spectrum due to the terrestrial 
atmosphere, 43. 
Glaisher (J.) on a new barometer used in 
the last balloon ascents, 31. 
Glass vessels, J. P. Gassiot on the mode 
of preparing carbonic acid yacua in 
large, 42. 
Godwin-Austen (Capt.) on the glacier 
henomena of the valley of the Upper 
ndus, 67. 
Gold-bearing strata of Merionethshire, 
T. A. Readwin on the, 87. 
Gold-fields of Otago, W. Lauder Lindsay 
on the geology of the, 77. 
of Auckland, New Zealand, W. Lau- 
der Lindsay on the geology of the, 80. 
Grass land,*J. B. Lawes and Dr. Gilbert 
on the effects of different manures on 
the mixed herbage of, 191. 
Gravel, H. Seeley on a whittled bone 
from the Barnwell, 94. 
Gray (Dr. J. E.) on changes of form 
of the head of crocodiles, and on the 
crocodiles of India and Africa, 106. 
Greenwich Hospital School, Rey. G. 
Fisher on the numerical mode of esti- 
mating educational qualifications, as 
pursued at the, 153. 
Grimaldi (Dr. F.) on a new marine boiler 
for generating steam of high pressure, 
Guernsey, Dr. S. Elliott’s table of the 
elements of the climate of, 140. 
Guide-propeller, John Coryton on the, 
184. 
Guy (G. M.) onan electromotive engine, 
27. 
Hamilton (Sir W. R.), quaternion proof 
of a theorem of reciprocity of curves 
in space, 4. 
Harcourt (A. Vernon) on a particular 
case of induced chemical action, 43. 
Harkness (Professor) on the Skiddaw 
slate series, 72. 
Harley (Dr. George) on Schonbein’s ant- 
ozone, 44; on secret poisoning, 129. 
Harley (Rev. Robert) on a certain class 
of linear differential equations, 4. 
