200 
Chloroform accidents, Dr. Charles Kidd 
on restoring patients in, 116. 
Chromatoscope, A. Claudet on the star, 5. 
Cist of the stone age, E. Roberts and 
Prof. Busk on the opening of a, near 
the coast of the Moray Firth, 146. 
Clapham (R. Calvert) on minerals and 
salts found in coal-pits, 37. 
Clark (Stewart) on the ventilation of 
barracks and other public buildings in 
India, 111. 
Claudet (A.) on the star chromatoscope, 
5; on some phenomena produced ‘ 
the refractive power of the eye, 11. 
Cleland (Dr.) on the ligamentous action 
of the long muscles in man and other 
animals, 111; on the change of atti- 
tude which takes place in infants be- 
ginning to walk, 112. 
Clerodendron Thomsone (Balf.) from 
Old Calabar, description of the fruit 
of, by Prof. Balfour, 95. 
Cleveland blast-furnaces, J. Pattinson on 
a deposit in the gas-tubes of the, 48. 
ironstone, J. Pattinson on zinc, 
nickel, and cobalt in the, 49. 
Cloud, Prof. Chevallier on an instru- 
ment for ascertaining the height of a, 
Coal-field, W. Matthias Dunn on the re- 
lations of the Cumberland, to the red 
sandstone, 68. 
of Durham, Nicholas Wood and 
Edward F. Boyd on “the Wash,” a 
remarkable denudation through a por- 
tion of the, 89, 
*Coal-measures of Sydney, Cape Breton, 
J. P. Lesley on the, 82. 
Coal-miners of Durham and Northum- 
berland, Dr. Wilson on the habits and 
diseases of the, 126. 
Coal-pits, R. C. Clapham and John Da- 
glish on minerals and salts found in, 37. 
Coal-plants from Nova Scotia, Dr. Daw- 
_ son on two new, 67, 
Coffin (Prof.) on the path of a meteoric 
fireball relatively to the earth’s sur- 
face, 21. 
Colliery water, Thomas Richardson’s 
analysis of a deposit from a, containing 
sulphate of baryta, 54. 
Colonial schools and hospitals, remarks 
on native, 155, 
Condy (H. B.) on disinfectants, 40. 
Cook (W.) on Bonelli’s printing-tele- 
graph, 18. 
Copper and its applications, M. Oudry 
on, 19. 
ea galvanic, the Abbé Moigno on, 
REPORT—1863. 
Corfu, Prof. D. T. Ansted on a deposit 
of sulphur in, 64, 
Coventry Freehold Land Society, C. H. 
Bracebridge on, 151. 
Cowen (Joseph) on fire-clay goods, 40. 
*Craft (Mr.) on a visit to Dahomey, 135. 
Cranial deformities, W. Turner on, 124. 
Cranioscopy of South American nations, 
C. Carter Blake on some points in the, 
Cranium, human, Henry Duckworth on 
a, from Amiens, 136. 
Crawfurd (John) on the so-called Celtic 
languages, in reference to the question 
of race, 135; on the origin of the gip- 
sies, 135; on the commixture of the 
races of man, as affecting the progress 
of civilization in Eastern Asia and the 
Malay and Polynesian Islands, 135; 
on Sir Charles Lyell’s ‘ Antiquity of 
Man,’ 136. 
Cribellites carbonarius from the moun- 
tain-limestone formation of Northum- 
berland, description of, by George 
Tate, 88. 
Criminals, Thomas Robins’s observations 
on, 166 
Crookes (W.) on the extraction of thal- 
lium on a large scale from the flue- 
dust of pyrites-burners, 41. 
Crossfell, W. Bainbridge on thePennine 
fault in connexion with the volcanic 
rocks at the foot of, 64. 
Curved lines, H. Schlagintweit on a new 
revolving scale for measuring, 25. 
Daglish (John) on minerals and salts 
found in coal-pits, 37. 
*Dahomey, Mr. Craft on a visit to, 135. 
Dale (Rey. T. P.) on specific refractive 
energy, 12. , 
*Dallas (Duncan C.) on photelectric en- 
graving, and observations upon sundry 
asin of photographic engraving, 
4 
Davies (J. Alexander) on the causes of 
earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, 67. 
Davison (Robert) on the decortication 
of cereals, 171; on improvements in 
machinery and apparatus for cleansing 
and purifying casks, 172. 
Davy (Dr. John) on the slacking of 
quicklime, 43; observations on the 
eggs of birds, 112; on the colour of 
the salmon, 102; observations on the 
blood, chiefly in relation to the ques- 
tion, Is ammonia one of its normal 
constituents ?, 112. 
Dawes (Rev. W. R.), description of a 
solar eyepiece invented by, 6, 
