894 



REPORT — 1901. 



*Walkee (Prof. James) on the nomen- 

 clature of the ions, 613. 



Wallace (Prof. Robert) on British agri- 

 culture, 747. 



Wanklyn (Prof. J. A.) on arsenical 

 pigmentation, 816. 



Wabd (Prof. Marshall) on the morplio- 

 logy, ^e., of the Hodostemacece, 447. 



on the Bromes and their brown 



rusts, 836. 



Water, specific heat of, the variation of 



the. Prof. H. L. Callendar on, 34. 

 , variation of the critical velocity of, 



with temperature, H. T. Barnes and 



E. G. Coker on, 579. 

 Watebston (David) and D. Hepburn 



on the pelvis of the porpoise as a guide 



to the determination of a sacral region 



in Cetacea, 680. 

 Watkin (Col.) on the B.A. screw gavge, 



407. 

 Watson (W.) on determining magnetic 



force at sea, 29. 

 Watts (Dr. Marshall) 07i wave-length 



tables of the spectra of the elements and 



compounds, 79. 



(Prof. W. W.) on the movements of 



underground maters of N. W. York- 

 shire, 337. 



on the collection of photographs of 



geological interest in the United King- 

 dom, 339. 



on the work of the Corresponding 



Societies Committee, 465. 



Wave-length tables of the spectra of the 

 elements and compounds, Report on, 79. 

 Waves, terrestrial surface. Report on, 

 398. 



, the size of, as observed at sea, 



Vaughan Cornish on, 773. 



Weather maps, W. N. Shaw on, 725. 



Webbeb (Maj.-Gen.) on the £.A. screw 

 gauge, 407. 



*Wbiss (Prof. F. E.) on abnormal cat- 

 kins of the hazel, 857. 



Welch (R.) on the collection of photo- 

 graphs of geological interest in the 

 United Kingdom, 339. 



Weldon (Prof. W. F. R.) on the occu- 

 pation of a table at the Zoological 

 Station at Naples, 354. 



on investigations made at the Marine 



Siological Association Laboratory at 

 Plymouth, 376. 



Westleton Beds, Further note by H. B. 

 Woodward on the, 635. 



Wethbbbd (E.) on undergroiindtempern- 

 ture, 64. 



Wheelee (W. H.) on terrestrial surface 

 waves, 398. 



on the source of warp in the 



Humber, 652. 



Whitaker (W.) on the work of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 465. 



♦Wigham (John R.) on long continuous 



burning petroleum lamps for buoys and 



beacons, 768. 

 * on a new scintillating lighthouse 



light, 768. 

 Wild tribes of the Malay Peninsula, W. 



W. Skeat on the, 803. 

 Wilson (Prof. Ernest) on the commer- 

 cial importance of aluminium, 771. 

 (Harold A.) on the laws of electro- 

 lysis of alkali salt vapour, 547. 

 Withers (Prof. H. L.) on the scope of 



the science of education, 866. 

 Woman as a worker, the present position 



of. Miss M. H. Irwin on, 756. 

 Women's labour, Report on the economic 



effect of legislation regulating, 399. 

 *W00D (A.), Prof. A. Gray, and J. S. 



DuNLOP on elastic fatigue as shown 



by metals and woods, 529. 

 (Sir H. T.) on the B.A. screw 



gauge, 407. 

 WooDALL (H. J.) and Lieut.-Col. 



Cunningham on the determination of 



successive high primes, 553. 

 Woodward (A. Smith) on the bone-beds 



of Pikermi, Attica, and in N. Euboea, 



656. 



(Dr. H.) on life-zones in the British 



Carboniferous rocks, 288. 

 — on the compilation of 



an index 

 generwn et specierum animalium, 362. 



(H. B.) 071 the collection of photo- 

 graphs of geological interest in the 

 United Kingdom, 339. 



on a phosphatic layer at the base of 



the Inferior Oolite in Skye, 635. 



on the Westleton Beds, 635. 



WooLNOUGH (F.) 071 the collection of 

 photographs of geological interest in the 

 U7iited Kingdom, 339. 



WoBSDELL (W. C.) on the morphology 

 of the flowers of Cephalotaxus, 834. 



on the morphology of the ovule, 



834. 



Wynne (A. B.) on undergro7ind tempera- 

 ture, 64. 



(Dr. W. P.) 071 the isomorijhous 



derivatives of benzene, 78. 



*Yangtse, the Upper, the crux of the, 



Arctiibald Little on, 727. 

 *Yapp (R. H.) on some botanical photo- 

 graphs from the Malay Peninsula, 831. 

 on two Malayan ' myrmecophilous ' 



ferns, 851. 

 *Yeasts, spore-formation in, T. Barker 



on, 857. 

 Yew, apparently cut by man, from the 



Forest bed on the E. coast of England, 



F. D. Longe on, 798. 

 , the past history of the, in Great 



Britain and Ireland, Prof. H, Conwentz 



on, 839. 



