240 



REFOKT — 1869. 



Decomposition of carbonic oxide by 

 spongy iron, I. Lowthian Bell on tlie, 

 62. 



Dendroidal forms assumed by minerals, 

 Dr. Heaton on, 127. 



*Dendy (W. C.) on tbe primitive status 

 of man, 130. 



Denton (J. Bailey) on the technical 

 education of the agricultural labourer, 

 182. 



Deimdation of the Shropshire and South 

 Stafibrdshire coal-tields, John Randall 

 on the, 100. 



of Western Brittany, by G. A. La- 

 bour, 95. 



*Devon and Cornwall, Frank Buckland 

 on the salmon rivers of, 111. 



* and Cornwall, N. Whitley on the 



distribution of chalk flints and flakes 

 in, 103. 



in prehistoric times, T. M. HaU on 



the method of forming the flint flakes 

 used by the early inhabitants of, 134. 



Devonian group, the, considered geolo- 

 gically and geographically, by R. A. C. 

 Godwin- Austen, 88. 



Devonport (Heniy K. Bamber) on the 

 water-supply of, 60. 



Devonshire Association for the Advance- 

 ment of Science and Art, Sir John 

 Bowriug on the, 179. 



Dew and its effects. Dr. Henry Hudson 

 on the formation of, 39. 



*Dewar (J.) and G. Cranston on some 

 reactions of chloro-sulphuric acid, 67. 



•Diamonds received from the Cape of 

 Good Hope during the last year, Piof. 

 J. Tennant on the, 101. 



Dircks (Henry) on some statistics illus- 

 trating the policy of a Patent Law, 182. 



Distance, theory of, W. K. Clifford on 

 the, 9. 



Distillation of gas from cannel-coal, Dr. 

 Stevenson Macadam on the economic, 

 69. 



*Dock, Sir E. Belcher on a navigable 

 floating, 209. 



*Dodd (Captain C.) on a recent visit to 

 the Suez Canal, 163 ; on the Runn of 

 Cutch, 160. 



*Drake (Francis) on hmuan remains in 

 the gravel of Leicestershire, 130. 



*Drift, D. Mitchell on flint implements 

 of the first stone age found in the,69. 



in Ireland, Eugene A. Conwell on 



a fossil mussel-shell found in the, 87. 



* near Norwich, J. E. Taylor on cer- 

 tain phenomena in the, 100. 



Dumbleton (the Rev. Edgar N.) on a 

 cranuoge in Wales, 130. 



•Duncan (Dr. P. M.) on the age of the 



human remains in the cave of Cro- 

 Magnon in the valley of theA'czere, 130. 



Earthy minerals of water in the form of 



heated steam, urged by wood fuel, J. 



Jeffreys on the action upon, 92. 

 Eaton (Richard) on certain economical 



improvements in obtaining motive 



power, 226. 

 Eau, Dr. Janssen sui' le spectre de la 



■\-apeur d', 67. 

 Economic Science and Statistics,Addres8 



by the President, the Rightllon. SirS. 



II. Northcote, to the Section of, 173. 

 Edmonds (R.) on extraordinary agita- 

 tions of the sea, 160. 

 El Dorado, Dr. C. Le Neve Foster on 



the existence of Sir Walter Raleigh's, 



102. 

 *Electric balance, F. H. Varley on the, 



46. 

 Electricity, Prof. G. C. Foster on some 



lecture experiments in, 46. 

 Electrification, Thomas T. P. Bruce 



Warren on, 47. 

 Electro- deposition of iron, H. M. Jacobi 



on the, 67. 

 •Electromagnetic experiment, the Hon. 



J. W. Strutt on an, 40. 

 Eknation and depression of the Green- 

 land coast, Robert Brown on the, 85. 

 Emigration, Dr. R. J. Mann on assisted, 



196. 

 Emission, and reflection of heat, Prof. 



Gustav Magnus on the absorption, 25. 

 Encroachment of the sea on Exmouth, 



A^^arren G. Peacock on the, 166. 

 England, Edward Hull on the som'ce of 



the qnartzose conglomerate of the New 



Red Sandstone of the central portion 



of, 91. 

 England and France, J. F. Bateman and 



J . J. Revy on a proposed cast-iron tube 



for carrying a railway across the 



Channel between the coasts of, 206. 

 *Erskine's discoverj^ of the mouth of the 



limpopo. Dr. R. J. Mann on, 164. 

 •Esquimaux considered in their rela- 

 tionship to man's antiquity, W. S. 



Hall on the, 135. 

 *Etheridge (Robert) on the occun-ence of 



a large deposit of Terra-Cotta clay at 



'\^'atcoulbe, Torquaj', 87. 

 Ethiopian and so-called Indian fauna, 



\\'illiam T. Blanford on the fauna of 



British India and its relations to the, 



107. 

 Ethnology and geology, H. H. Howorth 



on a frontier of, 135, 



