450 
Classified Index. 
YORKSHIRE—continued. 
[. tained during Meeting of Yorkshire 
Naturalists’ Union Marine Biological 
Committee at Scarboro’, September 
1911, F, H, Woods, 420-422 
MISCELLANEA. 
Arachnida: British Pseudoscorpions, 
additions and corrections to identi- 
fication list, Wm. Falconer, 192-193 ; 
Notes on the Crista of some British 
Earthmites, with illustrations, C. F. 
George, 200-201; List of British 
Velvet Mites presented to Hull 
Municipal Museum by Dr. C.° F. 
George, of Kirton Lindsey, Lincs., 
with data of their description as 
appearing in ‘The Naturalist,’ T. 
Sheppard, 372; Trombidium buc- 
cinator, illustration and description 
of, C. F. George, 380-381 
Archeology: The Evolution of the 
Millstone, with illustrations, J. R. 
Mortimer, 95-99 
Birds: Abundance of Nightingale in 
Shropshire. ash! gh OLLeSL Eze ze 
Remarkable nidification of a captive 
Kestrel, with illustrations of egg, 
C. J. Patten, 306-307; Guillemot 
Nesting in Kittiwake’s Nest on Bass 
Rock, R. Fortune, 379 
Botany: The Chemistry of some Com- 
mon Plants—Narcissus pseudo-nar- 
cissus(Daffodil), Chenopodium bonus- 
henricus (Goosefoot), Armeria mari- 
tima (Sea Pink), Galium aparine 
(Cleavers), P. Q. Keegan, 222-224 ; 
Cardamine pratensis (Cuckoo Flower) 
P. Q. Keegan, 295-296; Stachys 
sylvatica (Woundwort), Menyanthes 
trifoliata (Bogbean), and Hypericum 
perforatum (St. John’s Wort), 
P. Q. Keegan, 418-419; The Seed- 
ling .Structure of Dryas octopetala, 
with diagrammatic figures, A. E. 
Mellor, 310-312; Note on Swiss 
Monograph of Adoxa moschatellina 
L., 371; The Relation of the present 
Plant Population of the British Isles 
to the Glacial Period, read at the 
Portsmouth Meeting of the British 
Association, Clement Reid, 373-379 
Crustacea: Notes on the Homing 
Habits of Crabs, 401-403 
Coleoptera: The pupation of Dytiscus 
marginalis, Llewellyn Lloyd, 19-20 
Fish: Illustration of Banks’ Oar Fish, 
276 
Fungi: Abstracts of following papers 
read at Yorkshire Naturalists’ Union 
Fungus Foray at Sandsend, 1910 :— 
“Abstract and Practical Mycology,’ 
G. Massee, 26-27; ‘The Structure 
and Life History of an Agaric,’ 
Harold Wager, 27-28; ‘The Rela- 
tive Frequency of the Species of 
Agarics,’ T. Gibbs, 28; ‘The Study 
of Fungi by Local Natural History 
Societies,’ being a paper read at the 
British Association Meeting at Ports- 
mouth, ro11, H. Wager, 351-356; 
The Uredinee, R. H. Philip, 382-386, 
Fungi found in_ polluted West 
Riding of Yorkshire streams, etc., 
including mention of Acremonium 
spicatum and Sporotrichum lanatum, 
new to Britain, J. W. H. Johnson, 
404-405 
Geology and Palzontology: The Evo- 
lution of the Millstone, with illustra- 
tions, J. R. Mortimer, 95-99; Note 
on Memoir entitled ‘Scandinavian 
Indicator-Boulders in the Quater- 
nary Deposits,’ Extension and Dis- 
tribution, by Mr. V. Milthers, J. W. 
Stather, 147-148 ; On Movements in 
Rocks, with illustrations, G. W. 
Lamplugh, 180-185; Bibliography 
wit respect to the Geology and 
Palzontology of the North of Eng- 
land (Yorkshire excepted), during 
1909, T. Sheppard, 257-270; The 
Relation of the present Plant Popu- 
lation of the British Isles to the 
Glacial Period, read at the Ports- 
mouth Meeting of the British Asso- 
ciation, Clement Reid, 373-379 
Hymenoptera: Mutilation of Bees on 
Lime Trees by Soldier Ants at 
Larbert, J. A. Harvie-Brown, 15 
Lepidoptera: Note on ‘A Biological 
Enquiry into the Nature of Melanism 
in Amphidasys betularia,’ 241 
Mollusca (Land and Fresh Water) : 
Note on Unio margaritifera kept in 
confinement, W. West, 300; Ano- 
donta cygnea, as to method of 
obtaining Glochidia of in confine- 
Naturalist, 
