INDEX II, 
Dawson (Dr.) on two new coal-plants 
from Nova Scotia, 67. 
*Devonshire, W. Pengelly on the chrono- 
logical value of the triassic rocks of, 85. 
Disinfectants, H. B. Condy on, 40. 
Distillation, Prof. Wanklyn on fractional, 
58. 
Dock-gates, R. A. Peacock on a new 
plan for hanging, 177. 
Dredging-cruise off Scarborough, J. Lec- 
kenby on a three-weeks’, 105. 
Drift-beds of Mundesley, Norfolk, Prof. 
Phillips on the, 85. 
es) persons, Dr. Charles Kidd on 
restoring, 116. 
Duckworth (Henry) on a human cra- 
nium from Amiens, 136; on the ana- 
tomical characters of the skull found 
by, 147. 
Dunn (W. Matthias) on the relations of 
the Cumberland coal-field to the red 
sandstone, 68. 
Durham, Dr. Wilson on the habits and 
diseases of the coal-miners of, 126. 
, coal-field of, Nicholas Wood and 
Edward F. Boyd on “the Wash,” a 
remarkable denudation through a por- 
tion of the, 89. 
, list of pheenogamous plants dis- 
covered in the 8.E. of, since 1829, by 
John Hogg, 96. 
University academical endowments, 
James Heywood on the opening and 
extension of, 154. 
Eagles, John Hogg on the Roman im- 
perial and crested, 104. 
Earth, Rev. James Brodie on the phy- 
sical condition of the, in the earlier 
epochs of its history, 67, 
Earth’s orbit and the moon’s mean mo- 
tion in longitude, Rev. Dr. E. Hincks 
on the relationship between the varia- 
tion of the excentricity of the, 6, 
surface, Prof. Coffin on the path 
of a meteoric fireball relatively to the, 
1. 
Earthenware, C. T. Maling on the ma- 
nufacture of, at Newcastle, 45. 
Earthquakes, J. Alexander Davies on 
the causes of, and volcanic eruptions, 
67. 
Effluvia, Dr. G. Robinson on the nature 
and varieties of organic, 120. 
Eggs of birds, Dr. John Davy on the, 
112. 
Electrometer at Kew, Prof. W. Thom- 
son on the result of reductions of 
curves obtained from the self-record- 
ing, 27. 
201 
Electromotive engine, W. Ladd on an, 19. 
Elephant and other mammalian remains 
in Oxfordshire, G. E. Roberts on the 
* discovery of, 87. 
Embleton (Dr.) on certain parts of the 
anatomy of a young chimpanzee, 113. 
Energy, Dr. J. H. Gladstone and Rey. 
T. P. Dale on specific refractive, 12. 
England, Frederick Purdy on the de- 
crease of the agricultural population 
of, in 1851-61, 156. 
*Eneraving, photelectric and photogra- 
phic, Duncan C. Dallas on, 42. 
Entomostraca, marine cyclopoid, George 
8. Brady on the, 99. 
of the carboniferous strata of Great 
Britain and Ireland, Prof. T. Rupert 
Jones’s synopsis of the bivalved, 80. 
Epidemic diseases, Dr. G. Robinson on 
the practicability of arresting the de- 
velopment of, by the internal use of 
antizymotic agents, 119. 
Epiglottis, Dr. George D. Gibb on the 
normal position of the, 114. 
*Ethndégraphical casts, Hermann Schla- 
gintweit on, 146. 
Ethnology of Ceylon, Mutu Coomara 
Swamy on the, 146, 
Eye, A. Claudet on some phenomena 
produced by the refractive power of 
the, 11. 
, Barnard S. Proctor on the focal 
adjustment of the, 16, 
Fallows (W.) on the origin of the Stock- 
ton and Darlington Railway, 153. 
Fauna, British, Henry B. Brady on Fora- 
minifera new to the, 100. 
——, Pacific, W. Harper Pease on the 
principal divisions of the, 101. 
Fawcus (George) on a new method of 
constructing boats, 172; on improyve- 
sy in waggons and gun-carriages, 
Fire-clay goods, Joseph Cowen on, 40. 
Fires, C. B. King on extinguishing, 174. 
Fishes, fossil, from the Permian lime- 
stone of Fulwell, near Sunderland, J. 
W. Kirkby on, 82. 
Fleming (Captain), journey from Tien- 
tsin (N. China) to the capital of Man- 
tchu Tartary, 136. 
on the ethnology of Eastern Man- 
tchuria, 136. 
Flint implements at St. Acheul, Prof. 
Phillips on the deposit of the gravel, 
sand, and loam with, 85: .°. 
Fogs, Dr. J. H. Gladstone on, 21. 
* 
‘Foraminifera, Prof. T. R. Jones and W. 
K, Parker on some fossil and recént, 
