210 
some of the, found in Kent’s Cavern, 
Torquay, 76. 
*Bowring (Sir John) on the moral and 
pecuniary results of prison-labour, 
156, 
Brachiopoda, British fossil, J. Logan 
Lobley on the range and distribution 
of the, 71. 
Bridgman (Dr. W. Kenceley) on electro- 
lysis in the mouth, 112. 
mie on (H.) on London street-tramways, 
9. 
Brine (Commander Lindesay) on the 
past and present inhabitants of the 
Cyrenaica, 131. 
British Islands, Rev. J. Brodie on recent 
geological changes in the, 60. 
Broads of East Norfolk, R. B. Grantham 
on the, having reference to the water- 
supply, stowage, and drainage, 191. 
*Broca (Prof. Paul) on the seat and 
faculty of articulate languages, 120. 
Brodie (Rey. James) on recent geolo- 
gical changes in the British Islands, 
60 
*Brown (Dr. A. Crum) on the connexion 
between chemical constitution and 
physiological activity, 113. 
Brown (R.) on the physical geography 
of the Queen Charlotte Islands, 133 ; 
on the formation of fiords, cations, 
benches, prairies, and intermittent 
rivers, 134. 
Brown (Samuel), Address as President 
of Section F (Kconomics and Statis- 
tics), 144. 
Brown (William) on arboriculture as a 
science, 90. 
Burgh Castle, Suffolk, analysis of the 
Roman mortar of, by John Spiller, 43. 
Bustard, Great, H. Stevenson on the ex- 
be of the, in Norfolk and Suffolk, 
Bist: 
Buabaumia aphylla, Prof. M. A. Lawson 
on the discovery of, neat London, 104. 
Cambrian Rocks, Henry Hicks on some 
recent discoveries of fossils in the, 68. 
Cambridgeshire, fens of, W. D. Hard- 
ing on the draining of the, 166. 
Canada, James Heywood on the sanitary 
state of the Indians in the settlement 
of Kanyeageh, 167. 
Cannon, great, of Muhammed IL, F. A. 
Abel on the chemical composition of 
the, recently presented by the Sultan 
Abdul Aziz Khan to the British Go- 
vernment, 34, 
erty R. Brown on the formation of, 
REPORT—1868. 
Cape Colony, Prof. Tennant on the re- 
cent discovery of diamonds in, 79. 
Carboniferous strata of Lanarkshire, 
James Thomson on certain reptilian 
remains found in the, 79, 
Carinaria Mediterranea, Robert Garner 
on the anatomy of the, 116, 
*Cattle plague, W. Smith on the pro- 
eress and extermination of the, in 
Norfolk, 177. 
*Catton (A. R.), certain facts bearing on 
the theory of double refraction, 17; 
note on Liéwig’s researches on the 
action of sodium amalgam on oxalic 
ether, 35; on Mitscherlich’s law of 
isomorphism, and on the so-called 
cases of dimorphism, 38. 
Cedrus Libani, John Hogg on the Wel- 
lingtonia gigantea, with remarks on its 
form and rate of growth as compared. 
with the, 100. 
Cephalopoda, Robert Garner on a male 
octopodous cuttlefish and some other, 
96. 
*Centrifugal pump, J. H. Gwynne on 
an improved, 192. 
*Chalk, C. B. Rose on the thickness of 
the, in Norfolk, 77. 
“ Change” on the surface of the moon, 
W. &. Birt on the extent of evi- 
dence which we possess elucidatory 
of, 11. 
Chapada Diamantina, the Rey. C. G. 
Nicolay on the geology of the, in the 
province of Bahia, Brazil, 74. 
Charcoal, Dr. R. Angus Smith on the 
absorption of gases by, 44. 
*Charlesworth (H.) on the substitution 
of hand- for shoulder-guns, illustrated 
by an explanatory exhibition of an 
elevator hand-gun on the breech- 
loading principle, 189. 
Charts, synoptic weather-, of the Indian 
ocean, Charles Meldrum on, 28. 
*Chemical constitutionand physiological _ 
activity, Dr. Crum Brown on the con- 
nexion between, 115. 
Chemical philosophy, Dr. Otto Richter 
on an original system of, comprising 
the determination of the volume-equi- 
valents, as also a new theory of the 
specific volumes of liquid and solid 
substances, 42. 
Chemical theories and refraction equi- 
valents, Dr. J. H. Gladstone on, 37. 
Chemistry as a branch of education, Dr. — 
Thomas Wood on, 49. ' 
Chloroform, W. H. Perkin on chloride 
of methylene obtained from, by means 
of nascent hydrogen, 40, 
