CONTENTS. Xlll 



Page 



Prof. Cleland on the Intei-pretation of the Limbs and Lower Jaw 119 



— on the Human Mesocolon illustrated by that of the Wombat. 120 



Mr. John C. Galton on the Myology of Cycluthurtts didactylm 121 



Mr. R. Garner on the Homologies in the extremities of the Horse 121 



The Rev. W. V. Harcoubt on the Solvent Treatment of Uric- Acid Calculus, 

 and the Quantitative Determination of Uric Acid in Urine 122 



Dr. Charles Kidd on the Physiology of Sleep and of Chloroform Anaesthesia 126 

 Dr. J. D. He.a.ton's further Observations on Dendroidal Forms assxmied by 



Minerals 127 



Dr. J. BuRDON Sanderson's description of an Apparatus for Measm-ing and 



Recording the Respiratory and Cardiac Movements of the Chest 128 



Dr. Benjamin W. Richardson on the Physiological Action of Hydrate of 

 Chloral 129 



Dr. Wilson on the Moral Imbecility of Habitual Criminals, exemplified by 

 Cranial Measurements 129 



Ethnology, etc. 



Vice-Admiral Sir E. Belcher on Stone Implements from Rangoon 129 



Mr. C. Carter Blake and R. S. Charnock's Notes on Mosquito and Wulwa 



Dialects 129 



Mr. James Bonwick on the Origin of the Tasmanians, Geologically considered. 129 



Mr. W. C. Dendy on the Primitive Status of Man 130 



Mr. Francis Drake on Human Remains in the Gravel of Leicestershire . . 1.30 

 Rev. Edgar N. Dumbleton on a Crannoge in Wales 130 



Dr. P. M. Duncan on the Age of the Human Remains in the Cave of Cro- 

 Magnon in the Valley of the Vezere 130 



Colonel A. Lane Fox on the Discovery of Flint Implements of Palaeolithic 

 Type in the Gravel of the Thames Valley at Acton and Ealing 1.^0 



Sir. Archdeacon Freeman on Man and the Animals, being a Counter Theory 

 to Mr. Darwin's as to the Origin of Species 132 



Mr. E. Garner on the Brain of a Negro 132 



Sir Duncan Gibe on the Paucity of Aboriginal Monuments in Canada 133 



on an Obstacle to European Longevity beyond 70 years . . 133 



on a Cause of Diminished Longevity among the Jews. ... 134 



Mr. Townshend M. Hall on the Method of forming the Flint Flakes used 

 by the early inhabitants of Devon, in Prehistoric Times 134 



Mr. W. S. Hall on the Esquimaux considered in their relationship to Man's 

 Antiquity 135 



Mr. II. H. Ho-worth on the Circassians or White Kazars 135 



on a Frontier of Ethnology and Geology 135 



The Rev. A. Hume on the so-called " Petrified Human Eyes," from the Graves 

 of the Dead, Aiica, Peru 135 



Mr. G. Henry Kinahan's Notes on the Race Elements of the Irish People . . 136 



Dr. Richard King on the Natives of Vancouver's Island 137 



Mr. A. L. Lewis's Notes on the Builders and the pui-poses of Megalithic Mo- 

 numents 137 



Sir John Lubbock on the Origin of Civilization and the Primitive Condition 

 of Man.— Part II 137 



