INDEX. 



933 



Minot (Dr. C. S.), *the development of 

 the supra-renal capsules in man, 755 ; 

 *the role of the heart in vertebrate 

 morphology, 760 ; *on the structure of 

 the human placenta, ib. 



♦Molluscs, the vascular sj'stem and colour 

 of, Prof. Lankester on, 736. 



Monetary jurisprudence, by S. Dana 

 Horton, 829. 



Monetary standard, the, variations in the 

 value of, report on the best methods 

 of ascertaining and measuring, 2i7. 



♦Money, some notes on, by Sir T. Farrer, 

 830. 



*5Ionobromo-benzene, the second, Prof. 

 Fittica on, 649. 



' Mono-metallists ' and ' bi-metallists,' 

 E. Atkinson on, 849. 



^loraine, the terminal, near Manchester, 

 Prof. H. C. Lewis on, 724. 



Moraines, the terminal, of the great 

 glaciers of England, by Prof. H. C. 

 Lewis, 691. 



More (A. G.) on the migration of buxls, 

 70. 



Morgan (E.) on the exploration of the 

 Cae Gwyn Cave, North Wales, 301. 



♦Morphology, the, of some cassalpine» 

 and the value of morphological criteria. 

 Prof. Hartog on, 763. 



*Morris (J. T.), improvements in Ufeboat.s, 

 882. 



*Morse (Prof. E. S.), ancient and modern 

 methods of arrow release, 904. 



Morton (G. H.) on the exploration of 

 the Cae Gwyn Cave, North Wales, 

 301 ; on the cu-culation of underground 

 waters, 358. 



Moseley (Prof.) on arrangements for as- 

 sisting the Marine Biological Associa- 

 tion laboratory at Plymouth, 59 ; on 

 the occupation of a table at the 

 zoological station at Naples, 77; on 

 the promotion of the study of geo- 

 graphy, 158. 



Mosses, a curious habitat of certain, 

 C. P. Hobkirk on, 772. 



Mott (F. T.) on the provincial museums 

 of the United Kingdom, 97. 



*Muga silkworm and moth (Anthercea 

 assa/ma), the, of Assam, and other 

 Indian silk-producing species, T. 

 Wardle on, 770. 



Muir (M. M. P.) on the teaching of 

 chemistry, 651. 



Muirhead (Dr.) on the herds of wild 

 cattle in Chartiey Park and other parks 

 in Great Britain, 135 ; on the prehistoric 

 inhabitants of the British Islands, 168. 



Muirhead (Dr. A.) on standards for use 

 in electrical measurements, 206. 



Munro ( Prof.) on the regulation of wages 

 by means of lists in the cotton industry, 

 303. 



Munro (Dr. R.) on the prehistoric inhabi- 

 tants of the British Islands, 168. 



Murray (J.) on meteorological observa- 

 tions on Ben Nevis, 34 ; on the marine 

 biological station at Granton, 91 ; on 

 the work of the British Marine Area 

 Committee, 95 ; on the depth of per- 

 manently frozen soil in the Polar 

 regions, 152. 



*^Iuseums, the arrangement of, discus- 

 sion on, 736. 



Musical slide rule, a, by J. Swinburne, 

 621. 



*Myographion, the demonstration of a 

 new, by Prof. McKendrick, 783. 



?i-ic diflferential resolvent, complete in- 

 tegral of the, by Rev. R. Harley, 606. 



Neolithic floor, the early, of East Lan- 

 cashire, by Dr. H. C. March, 912. 



Nerves, on the development of the roots 

 of the, and on their propagation to the 

 central organs and to the periphery, by 

 Prof. His,' 773. 



Neutralisation, the thermal phenomena 

 of, and their bearing on the nature of 

 solution, by Dr. W. W. J. Nicol, 656. 



Newton (Prof. A.) on the migration of 

 birds, 70 ; on the work of the British 

 Marine Area Committee, 95 ; on the 

 promotion of the study of geography, 

 158 ; Address to the Biological Section 

 by, 726. 



Nicholson (Prof. A.) on the marine bio- 

 logical station at Granton, 91. 



♦Nicholson (J.) on bimetallism, 852. 



Nicholson (Prof. J. S.) on the best 

 methods of ascertaining and mea- 

 suring variations in the value of the 

 monetary standard, 247. 



Nicol (Dr. W. W. J.) on the nature of 

 solution, 55 ; on the bibliography of 

 solution, 57 ; on the thermal phe- 

 nomena of neutralisation and their 

 bearing on the nature of solution, 

 656 ; *description of a shortened self- 

 acting Sprengel pump, 669. 



♦Nightingale, the distribution of the, in 

 Yorksiiire, by J. Lister, 770. 



Nile, between the, and the Red Sea, by 

 E. A. Floyer, 801. 



Nitrates, the reduction of, by micro- 

 organisms, by R. Warington, 653. 



♦Nitric acid, the action of, on benzene, 

 a study of, by Prof. L. Meyer, 653. 



*Nitrogen of vegetation, the sources of 

 the, the present aspect of the question 

 of. Sir J. B. Lawes and Prof. J. H. 

 Gilbert on, 660. 



♦Nitro-glycerine, apparatus for demon- 

 strating the explosion of, by P. 

 Braham, 672. 



Nitro-paraiEns, the reduction-products 



