INDEX. 
References to reports and papers printed in extenso are given in Italics. 
An asterisk * indicates that the title only of the communication is given. 
The mark + indicates the same, but that a reference is given to the Jowrnal or News- 
paper where the paper is published in extenso. 
FFICERS and Council, 1907-1908, 
XXV. 
Rules of the Association, xxvii. 
Places and Dates of Meeting, Presi- 
dents, Vice- Presidents, and Local 
Secretaries, xliii. 
Trustees and General Officers, lviii. 
Sectional Presidents and Secretaries, lix. 
Chairmen and Secretaries of Conferences 
of Delegates, Ixxx. 
Evening Discourses, 1xxxi. 
Lectures to the Operative Classes, Ixxxiv. 
Attendances and Receipts at Annual 
Meetings, Ixxxvi. 
Analysis of Attendances, ]xxxviii. 
Grants of Money for Scientific Pur- 
poses, Ixxxix. 
Report of the Council, 1906-1907, cx. 
General Treasurer’s Account, cxiv. 
Leicester Meeting, 1907 :— 
General Meetings, cxvi. 
Sectional Officers, exvi. 
Officers of Conference of Delegates, 
exvii. 
Committee of Recommendations, exvii. 
Research Committees, cxviii. 
Communications ordered to be printed 
in extenso, CXXxVii. 
Resolutions referred to the Council, 
Cxxvii. 
Synopsis of Grants of Money, cxxviii. 
Address by the President, Sir David 
Gill, K.C.B., F.RBR.S., 3. 
*ABEGG (Prof. R.), valency, 480. 
Abelian groups, a property of, by Harold 
Hilton, 461. 
ABNEY (Sir W. de W.) on wave-length 
tables of the spectra of the elements and 
compounds, 116. 
ABRAHAM (A.) on anthropometric in- 
vestigation in the British Isles, 354. 
Absorption of gases by charcoal, the, 
by Miss I. Homfray, 451. 
*Acid or alkaline reactions in the soil, 
the production of, by artificial manures, 
by A. D. Hall, 489. 
Apams (Prof. W. G), on practical elec- 
trical standards, 73. 
—- on magnetic observations at Fal- 
mouth Observatory, 93. 
ApDENHY (Dr. W. E.) on wave-length 
tables of the spectra of the elements 
and compounds, 116. 
Africa, British, the surveys of, by Major 
C. F. Close, 571. 
Agricultural co-operation in Great Britain, 
by R. A. Yerburgh, 601. 
ALCOCK (Dr. N. H.), certain problems in 
electro-physiology, 673. 
Alcohol, the physiological and thera- 
peutical uses of, discussion on, 669. 
ALLORGE (M. M.), the newly discovered 
cave of Atoyac (Mexico), 577. 
Amaltheus spinatus zone and the tran- 
sition bed in the middle lias at Billes- 
don Coplow, Leicestershire, a hitherto 
unnoticed section of the, A. R. Hor- 
wood on, 516. 
Analysis, the elements of, C. O. Tuckey 
on the teaching of, 459. 
ANDERSON (Prof. R. J.), the thickness of 
the skull in mammalia, 546. 
-—— racial types in Connaught, 654. 
ANDERSON (Dr. Tempest) on the fossili- 
ferous drift deposits at Kirmington, 
Lincolnshire, §c., 325. 
ANDERSON (W.) on South African strata 
and the question of a uniform strati- 
graphical nomenclature, 328, 
ANDREWS (A. W.), the Land’s End 
peninsula: a regional survey, 574. 
Anglesey, the composition and origin of 
the crystalline rocks of, report on, 
317. 
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, the anthropo- 
logical field in the, by J. W. Crowfoot, 
641. 
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