Brady 
INDEX II. 
*Bellingham, statistical account of the 
parish of, by W. H. Charlton, 153. 
Beta-hexylic alcohol, Prof. Wanklyn on 
the oxidation of, 57. 
Bewley (T.), description of a new plant- 
house, 99. 
Bird (Dr. James) on the yital and sani- 
_ tary statistics of our European army 
in India, compared with those of the 
' French army under like conditions of 
climate and locality, 151. 
Birds, Dr. John Davy on the eggs of, 
112. 
Birt (W. R.) on the selenographical re- 
lations between the chain of lunar 
mountains the Alps, with the Mare 
Imbrium and the Mare Frigoris, 3. 
*Biscuits, J. Robinson on an improyed 
manufacture of, 183. 
Blake (C. Carter) on the syndactylous 
condition of the hand in man and the 
anthropoid apes, 98; on some points 
in the cranioscopy of South American 
nations, 133, 
Blast-furnaces, Cleveland, J. Pattinson 
on a deposit in the gas-tubes of the, 
48 
Blood, observations on the, by Dr. John 
Davy, chiefly in relation to the ques- 
tion, Is ammonia one of its normal 
constituents ?, 112. 
Boats, George Fawcus on a new method 
of constructing, 172. 
Boilers, pipes, and cylinders of steam-en- 
gines, W. Smith on Mr. James Spence’s 
invention of a novel method of cover- 
ing, for the prevention of the radiation 
of heat, 187. 
Bonelli’s printing-telegraph, W. Cook 
- on, 18, 
Bothriolepis, G. E. Roberts on some re- 
mains of, 87. 
Bottles, D, Puseley on Thompson’s uni- 
- yersal stopper for, 180. 
Boyd (Edward F.) on “the Wash,” a 
remarkable denudation through a por- 
tion of the coal-field of Durham, 89. 
Bracebridge (C. H.) on the Coventry 
Freehold Land Society, 151. 
Brady (George S.) on the marine cyclo- 
poid Entomostraca (Calanide), with 
notices of some species new to Britain, 
99; on the zoology of Hylton Dene, 
near Sunderland, 100. 
enry B,) on Foraminifera new 
to the British fauna, 100. 
Bridge-foundations, T. Page on, 176, 
ritish fauna, Henry B. Brady on Fora- 
. -minifera new to the, 100. 
Brodie (Rey. James) on the. physical 
199 
condition of the earth in the earlier 
epochs of its history, 67. 
Browne (R.S.) on the relative distances 
of the planets from the sun, 5. 
Bryson (Alexander) on artificially pro- 
duced quartzites, 67. 
Bunning (T, W.) on the use of fuel in 
marine boilers, 53. 
Buys-Ballot (Prof.) on the system of 
forecasting the weather pursued in 
Holland, 20. 
Caisson gate, Admiral Sir E. Belcher on 
an improved, 170. 
Calcescence, Dr. C. K. Akin’s account of 
preliminary experiments on, 11. 
Calne, G. J. Symons on the experimental 
series of rain-gauges exeotad at, 26. 
Camps (Dr.) on the sanitary condition 
of the troops in India, 152. 
Canadian forests, Dr. Hulburt’s notes on, 
96. 
Carbon, Dr. T. L. Phipson on musical 
sounds produced by, 50. 
Carboniferous strata of Great Britain and 
Treland, Prof. T. Rupert Jones’s sy- 
nopsis of the bivalve Tntohanteans of 
the, 80. 
Caselli, on specimens of telegraphic fac- 
similes produced by his method, 20, , 
Casks, Robert Davison on improyements 
in machinery and apparatus for cleans- 
ing and purifying, 172. 
*“ Caution telegrams ” of Admiral Fitz- 
Roy, Dr. Moffat on the connexion that 
exists between, and the luminosity of 
phosphors 24. i 
me languages, R, S, Charnock on, 
34, : 
Tat John Crawfurd on the so-called, 
35. 
Celts, Northumbrian, Rev. G. R. Hall 
on the social life of the, 137. | 
Cereals, Robert Davison on the decorti- 
cation of, 171. a Ness 
Ceylon, Mutu Coomara Swamy on the 
ethnology of, 146. : 
*Charltor*(W. H.), statistical account 
of the parish of Bellingham, 152. _ . 
Chamoen (R. 8.) on Celtic languages, 
Charnwood Forest, Prof. Ansted on the 
metamorphic origin of the porphyritic 
rocks of, 64. 
Chevallier (Prof.) on an instrument for 
ascertaining the height of a cloud, 21. 
Chimpanzee, Dr. Embleton on certain 
‘parts of the anatomy of a young, 113. 
China, Captain Henderson on routes be- 
tween India and, 137. “4 
