INDEX II. 
yantea, with remarks on its form and 
rate of growth, as compared with the 
Cedrus Libani, 100; on two British 
wasps and their nests, 101. 
Holland (F. W.) on the peninsula of 
Sinai and its geographical bearings on 
the history of the Exodus, 135. 
Hollow wedge, Dr. J. H. Gladstone on 
the value of the, in examining absorp- 
tion spectra, 18. 
*Hong sang, description of, by Gran- 
ville Sharp, 141. 
Howorth (H. H.) on the nomade races 
of European Russia, 136. 
Huntingdonshire, fens of, W. D. Hard- 
ing on the drainage of the, 166. 
*Hutchinson (T. J.) on the rivers and 
territories of the Rio de la Plata, 
137; on the Tehuelche Indians of 
Patagonia, 137. 
*Huxley (Prof. T. H.) on some organ- 
isms which live at the bottom of the 
North Atlantic, in depths of 6000 to 
15,000 feet, 102. 
Hydrogen, nascent, W. H. Perkin on 
chloride of methylene obtained from 
chloroform by means of, 40. 
Hypnum Bambergeri, anew British moss, 
Dr. John Fraser on, 96. 
Iguanodon, Rey. W. Fox on the skull 
and bones of an, 64. 
Incrustation, Samuel Sharp on a remark- 
able, in Northamptonshire, 78. 
India, Dr. Hugh Cleghorn on the distri- 
bution of the principal timber-trees of, 
oe the progress of forest conservancy, 
9 
, Southern, Sir Walter Elliot on the 
sepulchral remains of, 154. 
Indian Ocean, Charles Meldrum on sy- 
noptic weather-charts of the, 28. 
dians, James Heywood on the sanitary 
state of the, in the settlement of Kan- 
yeageh, 167. 
“Jnsertion” of the leaf-organs of the 
flower, Dr. A. Dickson on some of the 
principal modifications of the recep- 
’ tacle, and their relation to the, 94. 
International coinage, Prof. Leone Levi 
om the present state of the question of, 
173. 
*Inventors and inventions, G. B. Gallo- 
way on, 165. 
Treland, Prof. Hennessy on the possible 
introduction of South European plants 
in the south and west of, 98. 
——, A. G. More on the discovery of 
Scirpus parvulus in, 106. 
Tris in vertebrate animals, Dr. Edwards 
215 
Crisp on the relative weight and form 
of the eye and colour of the, 114. 
Tron, John Jones on some points affect~ 
ng the economical manufacture of, 
92. 
—— nodules, spherical, Dr. John Lowe 
on the occurrence of, in the Lower 
Greensand, 72. 
Tron basins of Western Asia Minor, Dr. 
Hyde Clarke on the coal and, 61. 
hrigation of Upper Lombardy, P. Le 
Neve Foster, jun., on the, 190. 
*Jackson (Dr. Hughlings) on the phy- 
siology of language, 120. 
Jecks (Charles) on some ferruginous 
sandstone in the neighbourhood of 
Northampton, 69. 
*Jenkins (H. M.) on the tertiary depo- 
sits of Victoria, 70. 
*Jenkins (S.) on the noted slate-veins 
of Festiniog, 70. 
*Jeula (Henry), a brief statement of the 
recent progress and present aspect of 
statistical inquiry in relation to ship- 
ping casualties, 168. 
Jones (John) on some points affecting 
is economical manufacture of iron, 
192. 
Jones (Sir Willoughby) on the arterial 
drainage of Norfolk, 168. 
Kanyeageh, Canada, James Heywood on 
the sanitary state of the Indians in the 
settlement of, 169. 
Kekulé’s model to illustrate graphic for- 
mul, J. Dewar on, 36. 
Kent’s Cavern, Torquay, W. Pengelly 
on the condition of some of the bones 
found in, 76. 
Kiltorcan Hill, co. Kilkenny, W. H. 
Baily on some fossils from the Old 
Red Sandstone of, 58. 
Koch (Dr. Karl) on the necessity of 
photographing plants to obtain a 
better knowledge of them, 102; on 
_ the specific identity of the almond 
and the peach, 102; on the classifica- 
tion of the species of crocus, 102. 
Kohn (Ferdinand) on the recent pro- 
gress of steel manufacture, 193. 
Ladd (W.) on a further development of 
the dynamo-magneto-electric ma- 
chine, 19. 
*Lagrange’s theorem, a historical note 
on, by W. Barrett Davis, 8. 
Lanarkshire, James Thomson on certain 
reptilian remains found in the Carbo- 
niferous strata of, 79. 
