INDEX. 



917 



SOLLAS (Prof. W. J.) on the erratic Hocks 

 of the British Isles, 252. 



SoMEEViLLE (Alex.) on inrestiflations in 

 the laboratory of the Maritic Biological 

 Association of the West of Scotland at 

 Millport, 272. 



Souterrains, some Ulster, W. J. Fennell 

 on, 753. 



Sparmannia africana, the movements 

 of the flower-buds of, by Mrs. Rina 

 Scott, 803. 



Spear- and arrow-heads, the manufac- 

 ture of, by W. J. Knowles, 758. 



Spectra of the elements and compounds, 

 wave-length tables of the, report on, 137. 



Spectrograms of Jupiter, Uranus, and 

 Vesta, by P. Lowell, 555. 



Sporangial integuments, the morphology 

 of, by W. C. Worsdell, 812. 



Sporangiophores as a clue to affinities 

 among pteridophyta, by Dr. D. H. 

 Scott, 810. 



Spoi-nzoa, the life-historij of, H. M. 

 Woodcock on, 271. 



Standard analytical methods, the un- 

 desirability of establishing, by Bertram 

 Blount, 577. 



Standard scale for telescopic observa- 

 tions, P. Lowell on a, 553. 



•■Starfish, the relationships of the larva 

 to the adult in the, by Dr. A. T. 

 Masterman, 647. 



♦Stakkie (Dr. W. J. M.) on recent re- 

 forms in Irish education, 845. 



Stars, bright and faint, the relative appa- 

 rent motions of, by Prof. H. H. Turner, 

 552. 



State control and municipal policy, by 

 P. Ashley, 700. 



Stathbk (J. W.) on the erratic blocks 

 of the British Isles, 252. 



Statistics and Economic Science, Address 

 by Dr. E. Cannan to the Section of, 

 688. 



*Steam turbines, by Hon. C. A. Parsons, 

 730. 



Stebbing (Rev. T. R. R.) on the compila- 

 tion of an index generum et specieruni 

 animalium, 283. 



on the work of the Corresponding 



Societies Committee, 851. 



Steel (T.) on examples of Australian 

 fauna, 650. 



* exhibition of some characteristic 



Australian plants, 802. 



♦Stellar systems, illustrations obtained 

 by photography of the evolution of, 

 by Dr. I. Roberts, 541. 



•Stirling (James) on the new geo- 

 logical map of Victoria, 603. 



on a census of the flora of the 



Australian Alps, 7il9. 



*Stomach, the innervation and move- 

 ments of the, Dr. W. Page May on, 780. 



Stone axe factories near Cushendall, co. 

 Antrim, W. J. Knowles on, 757. 



Stone circles, the age of, report on ex- 

 plorations to ascertain, 455. 



Stoney (Dr. Cr. J.) on j>ractical elec- 

 trical standards, 53. 



on an improvement upon Huygens' 



construction, 539. 



how to apply the resolution of 



light into undulations of flat wavelets 

 to the investigation of optical phe- 

 nomena, 53'J. 



Steahan (A.) on life-zones in the British 



carboniferous rochs, 210. 

 Stroh (A.) on the B.A. scretv gavge, 350. 

 Subjects to be taught as science in 



schools, the, and the order in which 



they should be taken, by Dr. C. W. 



Kimmins, 844. 

 Subterranean chambers, some ancient, 



recently discovered at Waddon, near 



Croydon, G. Clinch on, 754. 

 SuDBOKOUGH (Prof. J. J.) and Dr. W. A. 



Bone, acid esters of methyl succinic 



acids, 586. 



and H. Hibbert, compounds of 



trinitrobenzene with alkylated aryla- 

 mines, 587. 



and K. J. Thompsox, action of 



alkalis on cinnamic acid dibromide 

 and its esters, 587. 



Sugars, the alkylation of, by T. Purdie 

 and Dr. J. C. Irvine, 583. 



Sulte (B.) on an ethnological survey of 

 Canada, 353. 



Sun, the uncertainty of our present 

 knowledge of the distance of the, by 

 A. R. Hinks, 555. 



Sunspots, minimum, and terrestrial mag- 

 netism, by Rev. A. L. Cortie, 522. 



Survey of the freshwater lakes of the 

 British Isles, T. N. Johnston on the, 

 680. 



*Sverdrup's, Capt., north polar expedi- 

 tion. Sir Clements Markliam on, 687. 



Sykes (Major P. M.), the geography of 

 Southern Persia as affecting its history, 

 together with a brief account of the 

 Helmand Delta and the great desert of 

 Persia known as the Lut, 677. 



♦Symington (Prof. J.), exhibition of 

 specimens illustrating physical anthro- 

 pology, 753. 



* demonstration on specimens illus- 

 trating points in physical anthropology, 

 770. 



* and Dr. Cecil Shaw, demonstra- 

 tion of Edinger's apparatus for higher 

 magnifications and stronger light, 784. 



Synthetical action of enzymes. Dr. E. F. 

 Armstrong on the, 579. 



Synthetical researches in the glucoside 

 group, recent, by Dr. E. F. Armstrong, 

 578. 



