INDEX. 



925^ 



Ewart (Prof. C.) on the marine biological 

 station at Grant on, 91. 



Ewing (Prof. J. A.) and W. Low on the 

 magnetisation of iron in strong fields, 

 686 ; on the magnetisation of Hadtield's 

 manganese steel in strong fields, 587 ; 

 on the influence of a plane of trans- 

 verse section on the magnetic perme- 

 ability of an iron bar, 609. 



Expansive working in direct-acting 

 pumping engines, by H. Davey, 880. 



Explorations, recent, made by Gen. Pitt- 

 Rivers at Rushmore, observations on, 

 by Dr. Garson, 912. 



Extra-morainic iDoulder-clay, Prof. H. C. 

 Lewis on the origin of, 692. 



Extra-morainic lakes, some, important in 

 Central England, North America, and 

 elsewhere, during the period of maxi- 

 mum glaciation, Prof. H. C. Lewis on, 

 692. 



*Fahlberg (Dr.), saccharine, the new 

 sweet product from coal-tar, 6-19. 



•Fairley (T.), vacuum injector pumps for 

 use in chemical laboratories, 669. 



*Farrer (Sir T.), some notes on money. 

 830. 



Fauna and flora of the Cameroons moun- 

 tain, report on the, 73. 



•Fire-damp indicator, a, by J. W. Swan, 

 884. 



*Fittica (Prof.) on the second mono- 

 bromo-benzene, 649. 



Fitzgerald (Prof. G. F.) on standards far 

 use in electrical measurements, 206; 

 on electrolysis in its physical and 

 chemical bearings, 336 ; *on the dif- 

 fraction bands near the edge of the 

 shadow of an obstacle, 584. 



and F. Trouton on Ohm's law in 



electrolytes, 345. 



•Fitzpatrick (T. C.) on the action of the 

 solvent in electrolytic conduction, 590. 



Fleming (Dr. J. A.) on standards for use 

 in electrical measurements, 206 ; on 

 electrolysis in its physical and chemical 

 bearings, 336. 



Fletcher (A. E.) on the present position 

 of the alkali manufacture, 638. 



Flora and fauna of the Cameroons 

 mountain, report on the, 73. 



Flora of China, report on our present 

 knowledge of the, 94. 



Flower (Prof.) on the preparation of a 

 new edition of ' Anthropological Notes 

 and Queries,' 172 ; on racial photo- 

 graphs from ancient Egyptian pictures 

 and sculptures, 439. 



Floyer (E. A.), between the Nile and the 

 Red Sea, 801. 



Fluorine compounds, the antiseptic pro- 

 perties of some of the, W. Thomson 

 on, 667. 



Food as an aid to elementary education,, 

 by G. H. Sargant, 851. 



Foord (A. H.) on the genus Pilocerat, 

 Salter, as elucidated by examples lately 

 discovered in North America and in 

 Scotland, 717. 



Forbes (Mr.) on our present knowledge 

 of the flora of China, 94. 



Forbes (Prof. G.) on standards of light,, 

 47 ; on an electric current meter, 564 ; 

 underground conductors for electric 

 lighting, ifcc, 875. 



Fordham (H. G.) on the provincial 

 museums of the United Kingdom, 97 ; 

 on the erratic blocks of England, 

 Wales, and Ireland, 236 ; on the work 

 of the Corresponding Societies Com- 

 mittee, 459. 



Foreign trade, our, the statistics of, and 

 what they tell us, by A. E. Bateman,. 

 848. 



•Formosa, by A. R. Colquhoun, 805. 



•Forrest (J.), Western Australia, 803. 



Forth Bridge works, the, by A. S.. 

 Biggart, 870. 



Fossil phyllopoda of the palaeozoic rocks, 

 fifth report on the, 60. 



Fossil plants of the tertiary and secondary- 

 beds of the United Kingdom, third re- 

 port on the, 229. 



Foster (Prof. G. C.) on standards of light,. 

 47 ; on standards for use in electrical 

 measurements, 206 ; on electrolysis in 

 its physical and chemical bearings, 

 336. 



Foster (Prof. M.) on arrangements for 

 assisting the Marine Biological Asso- 

 ciation laboratory at Plymouth, 59; 

 on the occupation of a table at the 

 zoological station at Naples, 77 ; on the 

 steps taken for establishing a botanical 

 station at Peradeniya, 96 ; on the phy- 

 siology of the lymphatic system, 145. 



Fothergill (Dr. J. M.), the effect of town 

 life upon the human body, 900. 



Fowler (Dr. G. H.) on some new types of 

 madreporarian structure, 759. 



Fox (H.) and A. Somervail on the oc- 

 currence of porphyritic structure in 

 some rocks of the Lizard district, 708. 



Foxwell (Prof. H. S.) on the best methods 

 of ascertaining and measuring varia- 

 tions in the value of the monetary 

 standard, 247 ; on the regulation of 

 wages by means of lists in the cotton 

 industry, 303. 



Frankland (Prof.) on electrolysis in lt» 

 physical and chemical bearings, 336. 



Frankland (Mrs. and Dr. P. F.), studies 

 on some new micro-organisms obtained 

 from air, 745. 



Fratercula arctica, note on a point in the 

 structure of, by F. E. Beddard, 771. 



Fream (Prof. W.) on the gramineous 



