INDEX. 



901 



CannaN (Dr. E.)i Address to the Sec- 

 tion of Economic Science and Statistics 

 by, G88. 



Carbon dioxide assimilation, tlie effect of 

 temperature on, by Miss O. L. C. 

 Matthaei, 805. 



*Carbonic anhydride absorbed from the 

 sea-water by air, experiments to ascer- 

 tain the amount of, Prof. E. A. Letts 

 and W. Caldwell on, 57G. 



Carboniferous fish fauna from Victoria, 

 Australia, Dr. A. S. Woodward on a, 

 615. 



Caepentek (G. H.) on the insect fauna 

 of some Irish caves, 657. 



Carter (Rev. "W. Lower) on the viove- 

 ments of underijroimd waters of North- 

 west Yorkshire, 224. 



♦Celestial photographs from the Yerkes 

 Observatory, exhibition of, by A. R. 

 Hinks, 551. 



Cells, the micro-chemistry of, report on, 

 470. 



Cestodes and trematodes parasitic on 

 Jishes, N. Maclaren on, 260. 



Ceylon, foliar periodicity in, by Herbert 

 Wright, 807 



the scenery of, A. K. Coomtira- 



swilmy on, 613. 



Changes, the principal, in South-east 

 England during Pliocene and more 

 recent times, a summary of, by H. W. 

 Monckton, 616. 



Chapman (Prof. S. J.) on the economic 

 effect of legislation reyulatiiig women's 

 labour, 286 ; in the cotton industry of 

 Lancashire, 287. 



the regulation of wages in deve- 

 loped industries, 708. 



*Charnwood Forest, a buried triassic 

 landscape, by Prof. W. W. Watts, 687. 



Chemical constitution and absorption 

 spectra of orf/anio substances, the rela- 

 tion between the, report on, 99. 



♦Chemical reactions, the question as to 

 the accurate conservation of weight in. 

 Lord Rayleigh on, 511. 



Chemistry, Address by Prof, E. Divers 

 to the Section of, 557. 



Chemists employed in Unylish chemical 

 industries, statistics concerning the 

 training of, repm't on, 97. 



Chick (iViiss E.) and Prof. F. W. Oliver 

 on the morphology of the seed and 

 seedling of Torreya, 814. 



Cheee (Dr. C.) on comparing and reduc- 

 ing magnetic observations, 58. 



♦Christen (Madame), inve.stigations 

 into the glacial drifts of the north-east 

 of Ireland, 604. 



Christie (W. H. M.) on comjiaring and 

 reducing magnetic observations, 58. 



Chbystal (Prof. G.) on comjmring and 

 reducing magnetic oiservations, 58. 



Chbystal (Prof. G.) on the teaching of 

 elementary mathematics, 473. 



Cinnamic acid dibromide and its esters, 

 action of alkalis on, by Prof. J. J. 

 Sudborough and K. J. Thompson, 587. 



Clark (A. 1!.), the influence of economic 

 history on economic theory, 695. 



Clark (R.) on the fossils of the Silurian 

 area of N.E. Ireland, 599. 



Clarke (W. Eagle) on the migration of 

 birds : the fieldfare (Turdus pilaris), 

 274 ; the lapwing (Vanellus vulgaris), 

 277. 



Cleland (Prof.) on a hitherto unre- 

 corded element in the occipital bone of 

 seals, 646. 



Clements (0. P.) on the B.A. screw 

 gauge, 350. 



Clinch (G.) on some ancient subter- 

 ranean chambers recently discovered 

 at Waddon, near Croydon, 754. 



Clowes (Prof. F.), the action of dis- 

 tilled water upon lead, 576. 



Coates (H.) on the collection of pthoto- 

 graphs of geological interest, 229. 



Cod, the structure of scales in the. Dr. 

 H. W. M. Tims on, 660. 



Coffey (G.) on the Kesh caves, co. Sligo, 

 247. 



on the occurrence in Ireland of 



objects of Hallstatt types, 760 



Cole (Prof. G. A. J.) o7i the Kesh caves, 

 CO. Sligo, 2i7. 



• the geology of the country in the 



neighbourhood of Belfast, 596. 

 on the structure of Ireland, 609. 



Collet (Miss C. E.) on the economic 



effect of legislation regulating women's 



labour', 286. 

 Colloids of zirconium, compared with 



those of other metals of the fourth 



group, by Dr. J. H. Gladstone and W. 



Hibbert, 585. 

 Colour vision, the physical aspects of a 



theory of, by Dr. F. W. Edridge-Green, 



549. 

 Conditions of health essential to the 



carrying on of the work of instruction 



in schools, report on, 483. 

 ♦Conservation of weight in chemical 



reactions, the accurate. Lord Rajdeigh 



on the question as to, 511. 

 Consumption in Ireland, the increase of, 



by R. Brown, 709. 

 ♦Continuous motion produced by vibra- 

 tions, Prof. W. B. Morton and A. M. 



Kinsky on, 511. 

 Cooke (H. L.) and Dr. H. T. Barnes 



on the variation of the specific heat of 



mercury with temperature, 530. 

 CooMARASWAMY (A. K.) on the scenery 



of Ceylon, 613. 

 COPELAND (Prof.) on meteorological obt 



servatipns o^ Bin Nevii, 93. 



