832 
RamatEy (Prof. Francis) the Rocky 
Mountain flora as related to climate, 
670. 
RampBavut (Dr. A. A.), some results of 
stellar parallax investigations made at 
the Radcliffe Observatory, Oxford, 400. 
‘*RANDALL-MAcIVER (Dr. D.) a Nubian 
cemetery at Anibeh, 622. 
RayueicH (Lord) on practical electrical 
standards, 38. 
Reap (Dr. C. H.) on the lake villages in 
the neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 270. 
on the age of stone circles, 271. 
on the preparation of d new edition 
of Notes and Queries in Anthropology, 
285. 
on the collection of photographs of 
anthropological interest, 285. 
*Recent progress in the United Kingdom 
as shown by statistics, by Prof. A. L. 
Bowley, 561. 
Refractometry, mercury and cadmium 
lines as standards in, by Dr. T. M. 
Lowry, 458. 
Regional surveys, Dr. A. UC. Haddon on, 
327. 
REICHENHEIM (Dr. O.) anode rays and 
their spectra, 124. 
Reip (Clement) on seismological investi- 
gations, 48. 
on the fossiliferous drift deposits at 
Kirmington, Lincolnshire, &c., 177. 
on the feeding habits of British birds, 
196. 
RENNIE (J.) on practical electrical stand- 
ards, 38. 
Resolutions (Section D) :— 
On the approach of the Norwegian 
rat, 510. 
On the fisheries of Canada, 510. 
Revevry (Ida Z.) and Dr. SUTHERLAND 
Simeson, the cortico-spinal tract in 
the guinea-pig, 645. 
Rueynoups (Prof. 8. H.) on the igneous 
and associated rocks of the Glensaul 
and Lough Nafooey areas, co. Galway, 
163. 
*____ description of the Avon section, 
Bristol, in illustration of Dr. A. 
Vaughan’s work on the English ear- 
boniferous limestone, 477. 
*___ lithology of the carbonifersus 
limestone of Burrington Coombe, 
Somerset, 477. 
= certain aspects of British scenery, 
as illustrating the work of the Geo- 
logical Photographs Committee, 483. 
—— British pleistocene canidie, 507. 
Rhynchosaurus, a skull of, in the Man- 
chester Museum, D. M. S. Watson on, 
(155. 
Ricuarpson (Hugh), the evidences of 
moral education, 725. 
Ricuarpson (Nelson) on seismological 
investigations, 48. 
'_—— on practical 
INDEX. 
RipgEway (Prof. W.) on the lake villages 
in the neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 
270, 
—— on excavations on Roman sites in 
Britain, 271. 
—— on the age of stone circles, 271. 
on archeological and ethnographical 
researches in Crete, 287. 
on the excavation of neolithic sites 
in Northern Greece, 293. 
Rivers (Dr. W. H. R.) on the preparation 
of a new edition of Notes and Queries in 
Anthropology, 285. 
Rospertson (Principal J. W.) the aims 
of MacDonald College, 725. 
Rocky Mountain flora, the, as related 
to climate, by Prof. F. Ramaley, 
670. 
Rocers (A. G. L.) on the feeding habits 
of British birds, 196. 
Rocurs (A. W.) on topographical and 
geological terms used locally in South 
Africa, 149. 
Roman sites in Britain, excavations on, 
report on, 271. 
Rotatory dispersion, the measurement 
of, by Dr. T. M. Lowry, 457. 
Rotcu (Prof. A. L.), the highest meteoro- 
logical observations in America, 415. 
Roruscui~p (Hon, Walter) on the com- 
pilation of an tndex generum et 
specierum animalium, 195. 
Rotifera, the distribution of the, by 
CG. F. Rousselet, 508. 
Rovssrtet (Charles F.) on the distribu- 
tion of the rotifera, 508. 
*Rubber cultivation, the new industry 
of, by J. Parkin, 667. 
Rucker (Sir A. W.) on magnetic observa- 
tions at Falmouth Observatory, 36. 
electrical standards, 
38. 
RupieEr (F. W.) on the work of the Corres- 
ponding Societies Committee, 325, 
RunHEMANN (Dr. 8.) on the transformation 
of aromatic nitroamines and allied sub- 
stances, and its relation to substitution 
in benzene derivatives, 147. 
*Russevy (Dr. E. J.) some physiological 
problems in agriculture, 461. 
and A. D. Hatt, the conservation 
of the fertility of the soil, 710. 
the factors determining the 
yicld of wheat, 756. 
Ruvruerrorp (Prof. E.), Address to the 
Mathematical and Physical Section, 
373. 
*— on the action of alpha rays upon 
glass, 398. 
RutrHEeRFoRD (Dr. J. G.) some economic’ 
aspects of the Western cattle trade, 
699. 
*Rurran (Co!. H. N.) the high-pressure’ 
service of the city of Winnipeg, 
584. 
