890 



REPORT — 1903. 



AiTKBN (T.), the effect of traffic and 

 weather on macadamised roads, and 

 the prevention of dust, 787. 



*Alcyoiiiu'm, nuclear changes in the egg 

 of," by M. D. Hill, 693. 



Alcyonium digitatum, the assimilation 

 and distribution of nutriment in, by 

 Edith M. Pratt, 68S. 



♦Alexander (A. D.) and L. Baikstow, 

 experiments in gas explosion, 791. 



*Alg(c, modern views on the phvlogeny 

 of the, by Dr. F. F. Blackman,"858. 



Alternators, parallel working of, b}' B. 

 Hopkinson, 778. 



Aluminium as an electrical conductor, by 

 J. B. C. Kershaw, 77G. 



Aluminium alloys, the electrical conduc- 

 tivity of certain, as affected by ex- 

 posure to London atmosphere, by 

 E. Wilson, 777. 



Amphibia, the origin of the epiphysis in, 

 as a bilateral structure, J. Cameron on, 

 €89. 



Akdeeson (Jliss A. M.) on the ccnnomic 

 effect of Icrfixlation ref/wlatiw/ women's 

 Idihour, 315 ; in h/imilries, 350. 



Anderson (Prof. R. J.) note on the skull 

 of Grampus grieseus, found on the 

 coast near Galway, G91. 



note on the peritoneum in Meles 



taxus, 692. 



the skull of ITrsiis ornatns, 692. 



Anderson (Dr. Tempest) o?? t7ie collection 

 of j)hotogra2}hs of geological interest, 

 197. 



f the recent West Indian eruptions, 



711. 



Angiosperms, the histiology of the sieve 

 tubes of, by A. W. Hill, 854. 



f Annan DALE (Nelson) on the coloration 

 of Malayan reptiles, 694. 



■ on a collection of skulls from the 



Malay Peninsula, 802. 



the survival of primitive imple- 

 ments in the Faroes and Iceland, 805. 



♦Antarctic expedition, the British, by 

 Lieut. E. Shackleton, 716. 



Anthocyan (red-cell sap) in foliage 

 leaves, J. Parkin on the localisation 

 of, 862. 



Anthrojjological work in Athens and in 

 Crete, W. L. H. Duckworth on, 404. 



Anthropology, Address by Prof. J. Sy- 

 mington to the Section of, 792. 



Anthropometric inrestigation in Great 

 Britain and Ireland, report on, 389. 



Antiquities near Kharga, in the great 

 oasis, by Dr. C. S. Myers, 809. 



tApes, the cerebrum of, by Prof. Sherring- 

 ton and Dr. A. S. Griinbaum, 700. 



Arber (E. a. N.) on the fossil florn. of 

 the Ardwick Series of Manchester, 665. 



.. on homceomorphy among fossil 



plants, 859. 



*Arbor Low stone circle, a model of, H. 



Balfour on, 823. 

 Arohceological and ethnological researches 



in Crete, report on, 402. 

 Ardwick series of Manchester, the fossil 



flora of the, E. A. N. Arber on, 665. 

 Armstrong (Dr. E. F.), mutarotation 



in relation to the lactonic structure of 



glucose, 635. 

 Armstrong (Prof. H. E.) oji isomorphous 



sulphonic derivatives of henzene, 85. 

 on isomeric naj^hthalene derivatives, 



174. 

 on the teaching of science in ele- 



mentanj schools, 429. 

 on the injiiience of examinations, 



434. 



on curricula of girls' schools, 883. 



Arsenic in food, minute quantities of, on 



the ai^proximate estimation of, by W. 



Thomson, 638. 

 Ascocarp in ryparobius, the development 



of the, by B. T. P. Barker, 849. 

 AsHBY (T., jun.),excavationsatCaerwent, 



Monmouthshire, 1899-1903, 806, 

 Astronomy and Meteorology, Address to 



the Subsection of, by Dr. W. N. Shaw, 



541. 

 Athens, anthropological work in, and in 



Crete, W. L. H. Duckworth on, 404. 

 Atmosphere, la circulation generale de 1', 



H. H. Hildebrandsson sur, 662. 

 • the upper, investigation of, hy means 



of kites, second report on, 31. 

 Atomic latent heats of fusion of the 



metals considered from the kinetic 



standpoint, the, by Holland Crompton, 



631. • ■ 

 Audibility, effect of meteorological con- 

 ditions npoD, by A. L. Rotch, 581. 

 Australia, the forest resources of, avail- 

 able for British commerce, by E. T. 



Scammell, 862. 

 AVEBURY (Lord) on the teaching of 



science in elementary sclwols, 429. 

 AVELING (T. C.) on the resistance of road 



vehicles to traction, 365. 

 Ayrton (Prof. W. E.) on practical elec- 

 trical standards, 33. 



Bagshot district, the Sarsen stones of 

 the, H. W. Monckton on, 669. 



Bailey (Lieut. -Col.) on terrestrial sur- 

 face-waves, 312. 



*Bairstow (L.) and A. D. Alexander, 

 experiments in gas explosion, 791. 



Balfour (H.) on the lake village at 

 Glastonhury, 414. 



* on a' model of Arbor Low stone 



circle, 823. 



Ballistic galvanometers, consideration of 

 some points in the design and working 

 of, by P. H. Powell, 570. 



