INDEX. 



929 



Jcerya purchasi, an insect injurious to 



fruit trees, Prof. Kiley on, 767. 

 Igxianodon, the reputed clavicles and in- 



terclavicles of, Prof. H. G. Seeley on, 



698. 

 Iliac divarication, alteration of, and 



other changes of pelvic forms during 



growth, Prof. Cleland on, 754. 

 Increase of wealth and population in 



Lancashire, W. E. A. Axon on the, 852. 

 Induction between wires and wires, W. 



H. Preece on, 611. 

 Induction coil, description of an, by G. 



Higgs, 616. 

 Inscribed stones from Mevagh and 



Barnes, co. Donegal, G. H. Kinahan 



on, 908. 

 Integral weights in chemistry, by Dr. 



T. S. Hunt, 637. 

 * Ions, experiments on the speeds of, by 



Prof. O. J. Lodge, 589. 

 Irby (Miss), land tenure in Bosnia and 



the Herzegovina, 837. 

 Iron mines of Bilbao, the, by J. Head, 



861. 

 ♦Isomeric change in the phenol series, 



by A. R. Ling, 642. 

 Isomeric naphthalene derivatives, second 



report on, 231. 

 Isomeric organic compounds, the solu- 

 bility of, by Prof. Carnelley and Dr. A. 



Thomson, 647. 

 Italian geology and the crystalline rocks, 



Gastaldi on, by Dr. T. S. Hunt, 703. 



Jamieson (G. A.), recent illustrations of 

 the theory of rent, and their effect on 

 the value of land, 536 ; limited lia- 

 bility, 826. 



Japan, the volcanic phenomena of, 

 seventh report on, 212. 



Jarrowite and thinolite. Prof. G. A. 

 Lebour on, 700. 



Jessen (Prof.), *a new physiological 

 principle for the formation of natural 

 bodies, 783 ; * a new geometry for the 

 bodies of man and animals, ib. 



Johnson (Prof. A.) on promoting tidal 

 observations in Canada, 31. 



Johnston (Miss E.) and Prof. Carnelley, 

 the antiseptic properties of metallic 

 salts in relation to their chemical com- 

 position, and the periodic law, 667. 



Johnston-Lavis (Dr. H. J.) on the vol- 

 canic phenomena of Vesuvius and its 

 neighbourhood, 226. 



Jones (Prof. T. R.) on the fossil phyl- 

 lopoda of the palaeozoic rocks, 60. 



Judd (Prof. J. W.) on the fossil plants 

 of the tertiary and secondary beds of 

 the United Kingdom, 229 ; the natural 

 history of lavas, as illustrated by the 

 materials ejected from Krakatoa, 

 711. 



1887. 



Junous alpiiius, Till., as new to Britain, 

 by C. Bailey, 745. 



Kapp (G.) on the condition of maximum 

 work obtainable from a given source 

 of alternating electromotive force, 876. 



Kfi,roly (A.), contributions to the remote 

 history of mankind, 911. 



Kasai, the Upper, and the Sankuru, ex- 

 plorations on, by Dr. L. Wolf, 798. 



Kay (J. T.), a plan for county councils, 

 837. 



Keeping (H.) on the Higher Eocene beds 

 of the Isle of Wight, 414. 



Kendall (P. F.) and V. Cornish on the 

 mineralogical constitution of cal- 

 careous organisms, 700. 



Kennedy (Prof. A. B. W.) on the endur- 

 ance of metals under rejDeated and 

 varying stresses, and the proper work- 

 ing stresses on railway bridges, &;c., 

 424. 



Kinahan (G. H.) on archfean rocks, 709 ; 

 on inscribed stones from Mevagh 

 and Barnes, co. Donegal, 908. 



*Knight (Mrs.), note on the ethnic type 

 of the inhabitants of the Evolena valley 

 in Switzerland, 914. 



Krakatoa smoke-stream, the direction of 

 the upper currents over the equator in 

 connection with the, by Prof. E. D. 

 Archibald, 619. 



LaohenaUa lyendula, the adventitious 

 buds on the leaves of. Prof. McNab on, 

 744. 



Ladenburg (Prof.) on the constitution 

 of atropine, 647. 



Lake George, New South Wales, some 

 variations in the level of the water in, 

 H. A. Kussell on, 597. 



Lamb (Prof. H.) on the theory of electric 

 endosmose and other allied phe- 

 nomena, and on the existence of a 

 sliding coefficient for a fluid in contact 

 with a solid, 495. 



Lamp, a standard, A. Vernon Harcourt 

 on, 617. 



Lancashire, the increase of wealth and 

 population in, W. E. A. Axon on, 852. 



Land, depreciation of, as caused by recent 

 legislation, C. C. Prance on, 835. 



Land tenure in Bosnia and the 

 Herzegovina, by Miss Irby, 837. 



Langley (Prof. J. W.) on a probable 

 manifestation of chemical attraction 

 as a mechanical stress, 657. 



Lankester (Prof. Ray) on arrangements 

 for assisting the Marine Bi 'logical 

 Association laboratory at Plymouth, 

 59 ; on the occupation of a table at 

 the zoological station at Naples, 77 ; 

 on the physiology of the lymphatic 

 svstem, 145 ; *on the vascular system 



3o 



