INDEX II. 



199 



dence of glacial action which it affords, 

 49. 



*Broniine, Dr. Phipson on sponges as a 

 source of, 34. 



Bronze age in Western and Northern 

 Europe, Thomas Wright on the true 

 assignation of the hronze weapons, 

 &c. supposed to indicate a, 131. 



Brown (R), explorations in the interior 

 of Vancouver Island, 116. 



Bunce (J. Thackray) on the statistics of 

 crime in Birmingham, as compared 

 with other large towns, 145. 



Burgoyne (General Sir J. F., Bart.) on 

 railways in war, 173. 



Burt (G.) on a pneumatic hammer, 175. 



Button-holes, J. M. Clements on a ma- 

 chine for stitching, 176. 



Byrne (0.) on dual arithmetic, 6. 



Cables, C. W. Siemens on the outer 



covering of deep-sea, 187. 

 , deep-sea, William Fairbairn on 



some of the causes of the failure of, 178. 

 -, W. Fairbairn on india-rubber and 



gutta percha as insulators for sub- 

 marine telegraphic, 14. 



Canada, Principal J. W. Dawson on the 

 fossil plants of the post-pliocene de- 

 posits of, in connexion with the cli- 

 mate of the period, and the formation 

 of boidder clay, 50. 



Cannibalism in Europe, Dr. Chamock 

 on, 117. 



, J. Crawfurd on, in relation to 



ethnology, 118. 



*Capello, (J. B.) on the great storm of 

 December 1864, on the coast of the 

 Peninsula, 17 ; on the magnetic storm 

 of the beginning of August 1865, as 

 recorded by the self-recording mag- 

 , netographs at the Kew and Lisbon 

 Observatories, 20. 



*Capewell (L. P.) on the organic re- 

 mains of the coal-measures, 49. 



Carbon, Dr. J. H. Gladstone on the re- 

 fraction equivalent of, 11. 



Carpenter (Dr. P. P.) on the regard due 

 to usage and utility, as well as mere 

 priority in fixing geological nomen- 

 clature, 83. 



Carte (Dr.) on the voracity of Chiasmo- 

 dus, 84. 



*Cattle murrain, Dr. Shettle on the 

 causes of the, 111. 



Cell pathology, Dr. J. Hughes Bennett 

 on the formation of pus, in reference 

 to the doctrine of, 101. 



Cephalaspis, E. Bay Lankester on the 

 British species of, 65. 



Cerebellum, Dr. W. Dickenson on the 

 functions of the, 106. 



Civilization, Robert Dunn on the in- 

 fluence of, upon the development of 

 the brain in the different races of man, 

 119. 



Chain-testing machines, Sir William G. 

 Armstrong on, 165. 



*Chalk at Withingham, near Norwich, 

 J. E. Taylor on contortions in the, 76. 



Chandless (W.) on an ascent of the 

 river Purus, 116. 



Channel Islands, J. Gwyn Jeffreys on 

 the occurrence of certain fossil shells 

 in the sea-bed adjoining the, 62. 



Channel Island seas, Bev. A. Peacock 

 on extensive and deep sinkings of 

 lands in the, 70. 



Characteristics, Prof. T. A. Hirst on 

 Chasles's method of, 6. 



Charnock (Dr.) on cannibalism in Eu- 

 rope, 117. 



* on the origin of the Gipsies, 117. 



Chasles's method of characteristics, Prof. 

 T. A. Hirst on, 6. 



Chiasmodus, Dr. Carte on the voracity 

 of, 84. 



Chloeon (Ephemera) dimidiatum, Sir 

 John Lubbock, Bart, on the transfor- 

 mations of, 89. 



Chlorophylle, Dr. W. Hinds on the iden- 

 tity of origin of, 81. 



Clark (D. K.) on torbite (a new prepa- 

 ration of peat) and its uses, 175. 



Claudet (A.) on moving photographic 

 figures, illustrating some phenomena 

 of vision connected with the combi- 

 nation of the stereoscope and the phe- 

 nakistoscope by means of photogra- 

 phy, 9. 



Cleghorn (Dr.) on the Deodar forests of 

 the Himalaya, 79. 



Clements (J. M.) on a machine for 

 stitching button-holes, 176. 



Climate, T. L. Plant on the anomalies 

 of our, 19. 



Clwyd, North Wales, George Maw on 

 some fossiliferous strata occurring be- 

 tween the hunter sandstone and moun- 

 tain limestone of the vale of, 67. 



Coalbrook Dale, Rev. W. Penton on the 

 geology of, 72. 



Coal-cutting and other underground 

 machinery, T. Levick on machinery 

 for compressing air, and the applica- 

 bility of such compressed air for 

 working, 185. 



Coal-field, H. Johnson on the extent 

 and duration of the South Stafford- 

 shire, 63. 



