900 



REPORT — 1902, 



♦BOSANQUET (R. C). excavations at 



Palseokastro in Eastern Crete, 770. 

 BosE (Prof. J. C), electric response of 



ordinary plants under mechanical 



stimulus, 802. 

 Bofa7iical photograpJis, the registration of 



negatives of, report on, 471. 

 Botany, Address by Prof. J. E. Green to 



the Section of, 785. 

 BoTTOMLEY (Dr. .f. T.) on 2)raciicat 



eleetricnl standards, 53. 

 BouKixOT (Sir J.) on an ethnological 



survey of Canada, 3.53. 

 BOUEKE (G. C.) on the micro- chemistry of 



cells, 470. 

 Bower (Prof. F. O.^on investigatio7is iti 



the lahoratori/ of the Marine Biological 



Association of the West of Scotland at 



Millport, 273. 

 BOWLEY (A. L.) on the economic effect 



flf legislation regulating women'slahour. 



286 ; report on the West Hiding of 



Yorkshire, 291. 

 Boyle (D.) on an ethnological survey of 



Canada, 353. 

 Boys (C. Vernon) on seismological in- 

 vestigation, 59. 

 (in the investigation of the upper 



atmosphere Inj means of kites, 77. 

 on the B.A. screw gauge, 350. 



Brabeook (E.W.) on the economic effect 



oflegislatioti regulating women's labour, 



28G. 

 on a, pigmentation survey of the 



school children of Scotland, 352. 

 on an ethnological survey of Canada, 



353. 



-onthe Roman fort at Gellygaer, 450. 



on the SilcJwster excavation, 453. 



on the conditions of health essential 



to tJie carrying on of the work of in- 

 struction in schools, 483. 



Bramwell (Sir F. J.) on the B.A. screw 

 gauge, 350. 



* a universal language, 847. 



Beay (G.) on the movements of under- 

 ground waters of North-west Yorkshire, 

 224. 



British carboniferous rocks, life-zones in 

 the, report on, 210. 



British fisheries' investigations and the 

 international scheme, Prof. W. C. 

 Mcintosh on, 638. 



British fossils, the registration of type 

 specimens of, report on, 210. 



British Zollverein, a, or preferential 

 tariffs within the British Empire, by 

 Judge Shaw, 702. 



Brockrams of the Vale of Eden, the, and 

 the evidence they afford of an inter- 

 Permian movement of the Pennine 

 faults, P. F. Kendall on, 604. 



Bkodie (Dr. T. G.) on the work of the 

 mciuunalian heart, 470. 



BromWiCh (Prof.) and R. W. H. f, 

 Hudson, the discriminant of a family 

 of curves or surfaces, 526. 



Bronze-age ceramic type in Britain, the 

 oldest ; its close analogies on the 

 Rhine ; its probable origin in Central 

 Europe, by Hon. J. Abercromby, 755. 



Brown (Prof. A. Cmm) on meteorological 

 observations on Ben Nevis, 93. 



Beown (Dr. H. T.) on the work of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 851. 



Brown (.J.) on the resistance of road 

 vehicles to traction, 314. 



a new elastic vehicle wheel, 731. 



an all-stations express train, 732. 



Brown (R.), the increase of consumption 

 in Ireland, 709. 



Beuce (W. S.), the Scottish national 

 antarctic expedition, 686. 



Bruce-Kingsmill (Capt. .J.), Mr. Peta- 

 vel's recording gauge applied to ord- 

 nance and small arms, 538. 



Bry'AN (Prof. G. H.), the longitudinal 

 stability of aerial gliders, 524. 



* the positions of hjxlrogen and 



helium in relation to the earth's atmo- 

 sphere, 556. 



BUCHAN (Dr. A.) on the investigation of 

 the upper atmosphere by means of kites, 

 77. 



on meteorological observaCwns on 



Ben Nevis, 93. 



Buckley (R. B.), colonisation and irriga- 

 tion in Uganda and the British East 

 Africa Protectorate, 679. 



BuLLEY (A. Amy), a study in the psycho- 

 logy of primitive man, 764. 



BuEKE (J. LJ.) on luminosity and the 

 kinetic theory, 549. 



BuEEAED (Major S. G.) on the figure of 

 the earth, 541. 



BuETON (F. M.) on the erratic blocks of 

 the British Isles, 252. 



*Caldwell (W.) and Prof. E. A. Letts 



on experiments to ascertain the amount 



of carbonic anhydride absorbed from 



the sea-water by air, 576. 

 Callendab (Prof. H. L.) on practical 



electrical standards, 53. 

 Calymmatotheca type of fructification, 



a possible, showing structure, by Misii 



M. Benson, 808. 

 Cambro-Ordovician succession near Tre- 



madoc, the bearing of some new fossils 



from Penmorfa on the, by W. G. Fearn- 



sides, 614. 

 *Camel, the nervous system of the, bj' 



Dr. W. Page May, 782. 

 Campbell (Rev. J.) on an ethnological 



survey of Canada, 353. 

 Canada, an ethnological survey of, report 



on, 353. 



