214 
Game laws, Prof. Alfred Newton on the 
zoological aspect of, 108. 
Garner (Robert) on a male octopodous 
cuttlefish, 96; on the anatomy of the 
Carinaria Mediterranea, 116. 
Gases, Prof. E. Frankland on the com- 
bustion of, under pressure, 37. 
— , Dr. R. Angus Smith on the ab- 
sorption of, by charcoal, 44. 
Gearing (Arthur), examples of ocular 
demonstration of geometrical propo- 
sitions, 8. 
Geologicalchanges in the British islands, 
Rey. James Brodie on recent, 60. 
Geometrical propositions, Arthur Gear- 
ing on the ocular demonstration of, 8. 
*Gerstl (R.) on different spectra of one 
chromium salt, 58. 
Gill (C. Haughton) and Dr. Meusel on 
paraffin and its products of oxidation, 
39 
Girdlestone (Rey. Canon) on the condi- 
tion of the agricultural labourer, es- 
pecially in the west of England. 
Glacial ‘and postglacial structure of 
Norfolk and Suffolk, 8. V. Wood, jun., 
and F, W. Harmer on the, 80. 
Gladstone (George), observations on the 
atmospheric lines of the solar spectrum 
in high latitudes, 18. 
Gladstone (Dr. J. H.) on the value of the 
hollow wedge in examining absorption 
spectra, 18; on refraction-equivalents 
and chemical theories, 37. 
Godwin-Austen (R. A. C.), Address as 
President of the Geological Section, 51. 
*Goppert (Prof.) on the inapplicahility of 
fossil plants to support the theory of 
gradual transformation, 65. ;, 
Gold-field of South Africa, Dr. Mann on 
the, 187. 
Gorilla, Dr. Edwards Crisp on the intes- 
tinal canal and other viscera of the, 
114. 
Grantham (R. B.) on the Broads of East 
Norfolk, having reference to the water- 
supply, stowage, and drainage, 191. 
Graphic formule, J. Dewar on Kekulé’s 
model to illustrate, 56. - 
Great Britain, Dr. Ludwig Mond on the 
manufacture of sulphur from alkali 
waste in, 40. 
Great Bustard, H. Stevenson on the ex- 
tinction of the, in Norfolk and Suf- 
folk, 111. 
*Greenland, Edward Whymper on ex- 
plorations in, 145. 
Greensand, Lower, Dr.John Lowe on the 
oceurrence of spherical iron-nodules 
in the, 72. 
REPORT —1868. 
*Grierson (T. B.) on education in natural 
science in schools, 97. 
Grove (W. R.), artificial rocking-stones, 
an experiment, 65. 
Gunn (Rey. J.) on the alternate eleva- 
tions and subsidences of the land, and 
the order of succession of strata in 
Norfolk and Suffolk, 66. 
Gunn (T. E.), notice of rare fishes occur- 
ring in Norfolk and Lothingland, 97. 
*Guns, E. Charlesworth on the substi- 
tution of hand- for shoulder-, 189. 
Guthrie (Frederick) on the thermal re- 
sistance of liquids, 15; on methyl- 
acetonamine, ethylacetonamine, and 
amylacetonamine, 38. 
*Gwynne (J. H.) on an improved cen- 
trifugal pump, 192. 
*Hadley’s sextant, T. Dobson on a new 
correction to be applied to observa- 
tions made with, 8. 
Harding (W. D.) on the drainage of the 
fens of Cambridgeshire, Huntingdon- 
shire, Norfolk, and Suffolk, 166. 
Harmer (I’. W.) and Searles V. Wood, 
jun., on the glacial and postglacial 
structure of Norfolk and Suffolk, 80. 
Hayward (R.B.) on the chances of suc- 
cess or failure of candidates for three- 
cornered or four-cornered constituen- 
cies, 9. 
Health, Francis G. P. Neison on the in- 
fluence of occupation upon, 174. 
Heat, absorption of, W. Fletcher Barrett 
on sources of error in determinations 
of the, by liquids, 14. 
Hennessy (Prof.) on the possible intro- 
duction of South European plants in 
the west and south of lreland, 98. 
*Hessian of a cubic surface, Prof. H. J. 
Stephen Smith on a property of the, 
10 
*Heynsius (Prof.) on the albuminoid 
substances of the blood-corpuscles, 
LHI 
Heywood (James) on the sanitary state 
of the Indians in the settlement of 
Kanyeageh, Canada, 1868, 167. 
Hicks (Henry) on some recent disco- 
veries of fossils in the Cambrian rocks, 
68. 
Hieracium collinum (Fries), Prof. Bal-_ 
four on the occurrence of, in Sellirk- 
shire, with remarks on some recent — 
additions to the Scottish flora, 89. 
High latitudes, George Gladstone on the — 
atmospheric lines of the solar spec- 
trum in, 18. 
Hoge (John) on the Wellingtonia gi- 
