INDEX. 



889 



* Radium, Prof. W. Marckwald on, 601. 

 Railway rolling stock, present and 



future, Norman D. Macdonald on, 7C9. 

 Rainfall, the inverse relation of chlorine 



to, W. Ackroyd on, 603. 

 Raisin (Catherine A.) on Perim Island 



and its relation to the area of the Red 



Sea, 640. 

 Ramsay (Prof. W.) and G. Sbnteb 02 



hydrostatic pressure, 529. 

 Randles (W. B.) on the anatomy and 



histology of Trochu.*:, 377. 



* Range-finder, a portable folding, G. 



Forbes on, 774 



* Rankin (James) on a new orienting 

 apparatus for the Cambridge micro- 

 tome, 697. 



Rates, local, the real incidence of, 



Cameron Corbett on, 757. 

 Ravenstein (E. G.) on the climatology 



of Africa, 383. 

 — . — on a scheme for the surrey of British 



Protectorates, 396. 



on Martin Behaim of Niirnberg, 



1459-1507, 714. 



Rayleigh (Lord) onjiractical electrical 

 standards, 31. 



Read (C. H.) on the Natural History 

 and Ethnography of the Malay Penin- 

 sula, 411. 



on the age of stone circles, 427. 



on the worlt of the Corresponding 



Societies Committee, 403. 



* Reclus-Guyon (M.) on M. Elisee 



Reclus' map on natural curvature, 721. 



Reid (A. S.) 0)1 the collection of photo- 

 graphs of geological interest in the 

 United Kingdom, 339. . 



(Clement) 071 seismological investiga- 

 tion, 40. 



* (Prof. E. Waymouth) on the 



question whether solutions of native 

 proteids can exert osmotic pressure, 81 8. 



* on an ionic effect in the small 



intestine, 818. 



Rennie (J.) on practical electrical 

 itandards, 31. 



Resolving power in the microscope and 

 telescope, Prof. J. D. Everett on, 569. 



Reynolds (8. H.) on the excavation of 

 caves at Uphill, 352. 



Rhodes (John) on the occurrence of 

 phosphatic nodules and phosphate- 

 bearing rock in the Upper Carboni- 

 ferous Limestone, \V. Yorkshire and 

 Westmoreland, 655. 



. — — on the discovery of a silicified 

 plant stem beneath the Millstone Grit 

 of Swarth ITell, 656. 



Richardson (Nelson) on seismological 

 investigation, 40. 



Ridgeway (Prof. W.) on the Natural 

 Sistory and Ethnography of the Malay 

 Peninsula, 411. 



Ridgeway (Prof. W.) on explorations in 

 Crete, 440. 



* Rideal (Dr. G.) on humus and the 

 irreducible residue in the bacterial 

 treatment of sewage, 603. 



* on sulphuric acid as a typhoid 



disinfectant, 603. 

 RiGG (E.) on the B.A. screw gauge, 407. 

 RiVKRS (Dr. W. H. R.) on the function.s 



of the maternal uncle in Torres Straitg, 



800. 

 on the functions of the son-in-law 



and brother-in-law in Torres Straits, 



800. 

 * on the measurement of visual 



illusion, 818. 

 Road vehicles. Report on the resistance 



of, to traction, 402. 

 Roberts- Austen (Sir W. C.) on practical 



electrical standards, 31. 

 on the hibliography of spectroscopy, 



155. 



* Robinson (H. C.) and N. Annandale, 



Anthropological notes on Sal Kau, a 



Siamo- Malayan village, 804. 

 Roman remains at Ardoch, Perthshire, 



J. H. Cunningham on, 790. 

 camp at Inchtuthill, Perthshire, Dr. 



T. Ross on, 791. 

 Roots and shoots, correlation in the 



growth of. Prof. L. Kny on, 836. 

 ROSCOE (Sir H. E.) on wave-length tables 



of the spectra of the elements and com- 

 pounds, 79. 



on the teaching of science in ele- 

 mentary schools, 458. 



* on the organisation of secondary 



education, 863. 

 Ross (Major Ronald) on the story of 



malaria, 695. 



(Dr. T.) on excavations at the 



Roman camp at Inchtuthill, Perth- 

 shire, 791. 



RosSE (Earl of) on a leaf-arrestor, or 

 apparatus for removing leaves, &c., 

 from a water supply, 769. 



Rotating fluid, Poincare's pear-shaped 

 figure of equilibrium of, G. 11. Darwin 

 on, 550. 



RoTCH (A. Lawrence) on the systematic 

 exploration of the atmosphere at sea 

 by means of kites, 724. 



RiJCKER (Principal), Presidential Ad- 

 dress at Glasgow by, 3. 



on determining magyietic force at 



sea, 29. 



on practical electrical standards, 31. 



RUDLER (F. W.) on the n-ork of the 



Corres2'onding Societies Committee, 



465. 



*Sai Kau, a Siamo-Malayan village. An- 

 thropological notes on, by N. Annan- 

 dale and H. C. Robinson, 804. 



