940 



INDEX. 



Coral fungia, some points in the natural 

 history of the, W. E. Hoyle on, 717. 



Coral reefs, discussion on, 718. 



Cordeaux (J.) on the migration of birds, 

 146. 



Corporal penance, the survival of, by 0. 

 H. Howarth, 849. 



Corresponding Societies Committee, re- 

 port of the, 255. 



•Cosmogony, on theories of, and on the 

 mechanical conditions of a swarm of 

 meteorites, by Prof. G. H. Darwin, 590. 



Cossham (H.), the northern section of 

 the Bristol coal-field, 659. 



Cowles aluminium process, recent de- 

 velopments of the, by W. Anderson, 809. 



Cowper (B. A.) on the advisability and 

 possibility of establishing in other parts 

 of the country observations upon the 

 prevalence of earth tremors similar to 

 those now being made in Durham, 522 ; 

 an improved seismograpli, 818. 



Creak (Capt.) on the best means of com- 

 paring and reducing magnetic observa- 

 tions, 28. 



Cretaceous fish-fauna of Mount Lebanon, 

 a comparison of the, with that of the 

 English chalk, by A. S. Woodward, 

 678. 



Crompton (R. E.) on recent developments 

 of the Cowles aluminium process, 809. 



Crookes (Mr.) on electrolysis in its physi- 

 cal and chemical bearings, 339. 



Crosskey (Dr. H. W.) on the erratic blocks 

 of England, Wales, and Ireland, 101 ; 

 on the circulation of underground 

 waters, 145; on the teaching of science 

 in elementary schools, 164 ; *on a high 

 level boulder-clay in the Midlands, 

 656. 



Crustaceans, some Devonian, Eev. G. F. 

 Whidborne on, 681. 



Crystalline axis of the Malvern Hills, Dr. 

 C. Callaway on the geology of the, 654. 



Crystalline schists of Malvern and Angle- 

 sey, further notes on the origin of the, 

 by Dr. C. Callaway, 653. 



Crystals of calcium oxide and magnesium 

 oxide, the formation of, in the oxy- 

 hydrogen flame, J. Joly on, 634. 



Culverwell (E. P.) on the desirability of 

 introducing a uniform nomenclature 

 for the fundamental units of mechanics, 

 27. 



Cunningham (D.) on arranging an inves- 

 tigation of the seasonal variations of 

 temperature in lakes, rivers, and es- 

 tuaries, 326. 



Cunningham (J. T.) on some teleostean 

 ova, and their development, 703. 



Curved rays, orbits, and catenaries, Prof. 

 J. D. Everett on the relations between, 

 581. 



Cyprus, locusts in, S. Brown on, 716. 



♦Dairy industry, by G. Gibbons, 778. 



♦D'Almeida (W. B.) on Pahang, an inde- 

 pendent state in the Malayan peninsula, 

 747. 



Dalton (W. H.), a list of works referring 

 to British mineral and thermal waters, 

 859. 



Danks (Rev. B.), marriage customs of the 

 New Britain group, 847. 



Darwin (Prof. G. H.) on the best means 

 of comparing and reducing magnetic 

 observations, 28 ; on the advisability 

 and possibility of establishing in other 

 parts of the country observations upon 

 the prevalence of earth tremors simi- 

 lar to those now being made in Durham, 

 522 ; *on the mechanical conditions of 

 a swarm of meteorites, and on theories 

 of cosmogony, 590. 



Darwin (H.) on the effects of different 

 occupations and employments on the 

 physical development of the human 

 body, 100. 



Davey (H.), a new form of air-compressor 

 for variable pressures, 824. 



Davis (J. W.) on the prehistoric inhabit- 

 ants of the British islands, 289 ; on an 

 ancient sea-beach near Bridlington 

 Quay, 328. 



Dawkins (Prof. W. Boyd) on the erratic 

 blocks of England, Wales, and Ireland, 

 101 ; on the work of the Corresponding 

 Societies Committee, 255 ; on the pre- 

 historic inhabitants of the British 

 islands, 289 ; Address to the Geological 

 Section by, 644. 



Dawson (Dr. G. M.) on the North- 

 western tribes of the dominion of 

 Canada, 233. 



Dawson (Major H. P.), magnetic disturb- 

 ances at Fort Rae in 1882-83, 31 



De Ranee (C. E.) on the erratic blocke 

 of England, Wales, and Ireland, 101 ; 

 on the circulation of underground 

 waters, 145 ; on the erosion of the sea- 

 coasts of England and Wales, 898. 



Declination disturbances, wind values 

 and, at the Kew Observatory, results 

 of a comparison between the, by Prof. 

 Balfour Stewart and W. L. Carpenter, 

 28. 



*Deep-sea tow net, W. E. Hoyle on a, 

 717. 



De la Rive (L.) on composition of sensa- 

 tion and notion of space, 585. 



♦Dennett (Q. E.), through Kakongo, 745. 



Denton (J. B.) on the replenishment of 

 the underground waters of the perme- 

 able formations of England, 797. 



Development of institutions, on a method 

 of investigating the ; applied to laws 

 of marriage and descent, by Dr. E. B. 

 Tylor. 840. 



Dewar (Prof.) on standards of light, 39. 



