9l0 



EEPORT — 1902. 



*LettS (Prof. E. A.) on determinations 

 of atmospheric carbonic anhydride 

 made on board the ' Discovery,' 587. 



*_ and W. Caldwell on experiments 



to ascertain the amount of carbonic 

 anhydride absorbed from the sea- 

 water bj' air, 576. 



* and J. S. ToTTOX on the absorp- 



tion of ammonia from water by alg», 

 587. 



Levelling staff, a direct reducing, by 

 G. W. Herdman, 733. 



Lewis (A. L.) on the age of stone circles, 

 455. 



Lia Fail of Tara, the, and election of 

 kiogs bj' augury, E. S. Hartland on, 

 766. 



LiBBEY (Prof. W.), the Jordan valley, 

 680. 



Petra, 681. 



* with Lient. Peary in Greenland, 



687. 



Life, the suspension of, at low tempera- 

 tures, by Dr. A. Macfadyen and S. 

 Rowland, 804. 



Life-zones in the British carhoniferoiis 

 rocks, report on, 210. 



Light, the resolution of, into undula- 

 tions of flat wavelets, how to apply to 

 the investigation of optical pheno- 

 mena, by Dr. G. J. Stoney, 639. 



Linen industry of Ireland, a sketch of the, 

 by Sir R. Lloyd Patterson, 701. 



LiSTKK (J. J.) on the coral reefs of the 

 Indian ref/ion, 284. 



LiVEiNG (Capt. C. H.), Major W. E. 

 Edwards, and Prof. W. K. Hodgkin- 

 SON, the reduction of some metallic 

 chlorides by calcium carbide, 585. 



LivBiNG (Prof. G. D.) on Kave-lcngth 

 tables of the spectra of the elements and 

 comjmmds, 137. 



Localisation of industry, Kev. W. Cun- 

 ningham on the, G95. 



LoCKYEE(Sir J. N.) on tvarc-lenqthtallcs 

 of the sjjectra of tlis elements and com- 

 pounds, 137. 



Lodge (Prof. A.) on the teaching of 

 elementary viathematics, 473. 



Lodge (Sir O. J.) 07i practical electrical 

 standards, 53. 



-. on the teaching of elementary mathe- 

 matics, 473. 



Lolos, the, and other tribes of 'Western 

 China, Augustine Henry on, 765. 



LoMAS (J.) on the erratic blocks of the 

 British Isles, 252. 



on deposits dredged by Prof. Herd- 

 man in the Indian Ocean, 641. 



LoMAX (J.) on some new features in rela- 

 tion to Lgginodendron oldhumiunt. 801). 



LoMAX (James) on the occurrence of the 

 nodular concretions (coal balls) in the 

 lower coal measures, 811. 



Lonicera, the morphology of the flowers 

 in certain species of, E. A. N. Arber on, 

 816. 



Love (Prof.) on the teaching of elemen- 

 tary mathematics, 473. 



Lovett (E.) on tallies, 767. 



Lowell (P.), a standard scale for tele- 

 scopic observations, 553. 



expedition for ascertaining the best 



location of observatories, 554. 



spectrograms of Jupiter, Uranus, 



and Vesta, 555. 



Luminosity and the kinetic theory, J. B. 

 Burke on, 54S. 



Luminous bacteria, J. E. Barnard and 

 Prof. A. Macfadyen on, 801. 



Lunar surface, possible changes on the, 

 by S. A. Saunder, 551. 



Lut, the great desert of Persia known as 

 the. Major P. M. Sykes on, and on the 

 Helmand Delta, 677. 



Lyginodendron oldhamiiim, some new 

 features in relation to, J. Lomax on, 

 809. 



Macalister (Prof. A.) on the coral reefs 



of the Indian region, 284. 

 . on anthropometric investigations 



among the native troops of the JSgyptian 



army, 350. 

 on a pigmentation survey of the 



sclwol children of Scotland, 352. 



on explorations at Knossos in Crete, 



466. 



Macalister (R. A. S.) on a prehistoric 

 cemetery-cave in Palestine, 768. 



Macallum (Prof. A B.) on the micro- 

 chemistry of cells, 470. 



MacBride (Prof. E. W.), the develop- 

 ment of the common sea-urchin 

 {Echimts cseulentus), 647. 



MacDonald (Mrs. J. R.) on the economic 

 effect of legislatimi regulating women's 

 labour', 2^^. 



Macfadyen (Prof. A.) and J. E. Bak- 

 naed on luminous bacteria, 801. 



, and S. Rowland on the suspension 



of life at low temperatures, 804. 



McHeney (A.) on tfte Kesh caves, co. 

 Siii/o, 247. 



McIntosh (Prof. W. C.) on the nccupa' 

 tion of a table at the Zoological Station 

 at Na2}les, 259. 



on British fisheries' investigations 



and the international scheme, 638. 



McKendrick (Prof. J. G.) on the work 

 of the mammalian heart, 470. 



Mackenzie (Prof. J. J.) on the micro- 

 chemistry of cells, 470. 



Mack IE (Dr. Wm.), the conditions under 

 which manganese dioxide has been 

 deposited in sedimentary rocks, as 

 illustrated by the Elgin sandstones, 

 606. 



