INDEX. 



955 



Burton (F. M.) on the erratic blocks of (he 



British Isles, 242. 

 Butcher (Dr. S. H.) 07i changes affecting 



secondary education, 525. 

 ♦Butterflies, South American, some of the 



chief mimetic combinations among, by 



J. C. Moulton, 734. 

 ♦Butterflies of North America, mimicry 



in the, by Prof. E. B. Poulton, 734. 

 ♦Butterfly, the African swallow-tail, as 



an example of mimicry. Prof. E. B. 



Poulton on, 734. 



Caerleon, Monmouthshire, excavations 



at, by H. G. Evelyn- White, 858. 

 Caerwent, excavations at, in 1907-08, by 



Dr. T. Ashby, 857. 

 Caerwent, the Roman site at, report on the 



plant remains found on, by A. H. Lyell, 



343. 

 Callendab (Prof. H. L.) on -practical 



electrical standards, 31. 



■ on gaseous explosions, 308. 



— — the deviation of actual gases from the 



ideal state, 334. 

 Cambrian rocks of Gomley, Shropshire, 



some excavations in the, 1907, by E. S. 



Cobbold, 231. 

 Campbell (J. R.), agricultural education, 



804. 

 Campbell (Dr. S. G.) on the effect of 



climate upon health and disease, 442. 

 Camphor, the preparation of, from tur- 

 pentine oil, by Dr. C. Weizmann, 661. 

 Canada, the northward expansion of, by 



W. L. Grant, 765. 

 Cancer, body metabolism in, report on, 489. 

 Cannan (Prof. Edwin), the economic 



ideal and its apphcation to countries 



or nations, 789. 

 Captive balloon, the, at the Howard Estate 



kite station, by J. E. Petavel, 59. 

 Carbohydrates of the snowdrop leaf, the, 



and their bearing on the first sugar of 



photosynthesis, by John Parkin, 907. 

 Carbon dioxide, the solubihty of, in 



water, the influence of colloids and 



colloid suspensions on, by Dr. A. 



Findlay, 667. 

 ♦Carcinoma, a, occurring in mice, the 



action of two sera on, by C. E. Walker, 



882. 

 Carpenter (Prof. G. H.) on detailed 



natural history surveys of restricted 



areas, 650. 

 on some Arctic and Antarctic 



collembola, 733. 



some Irish experiments on warble- 



flies, 807. 



Carr (Prof. J. W.) on the fossiliferous 

 drift deposits at Kirminglon, Lincoln- 

 shire. d;c., 296. 



Carruthers (R. G.) and H. B. Muff, the 

 lower palaeozoic rocks around Killary 

 Harbour, co. Galway, and co. Mayo, 

 699. 



Carter (Rev. W. Lower) on the fossili- 

 ferous drift deposits at Kirmington, 

 \ Lincolnshire, d:c., 296. 



Cartography of the counties of England 

 and AVales, H. G. Fordham on the, 

 \ 768. 



Castlepook Cave, near Doneraile, co. 

 Cork, R. J. Ussher, H. J. Seymour, 

 E. T. Newton, and R. F. Scharfl' on, 

 697. 



Cathcart (Dr. E. P.), the relationship 

 of the pyloric to the fundic part of the 

 stomach, 879. 



Cave (C. J. P.), theodolite observations 

 of balloons penetrating the isothermal 

 layer, 598. 



Cave pearls (so-called), the occurrence of, 

 H. Brodrick on, 704. 



♦Cells of higher plants in fatal condi- 

 tions, the death-rate of, by Miss Nora 

 Darwin and Dr. Blackman, 902. 



Cerebral locaUsation in the prosimiae, 

 the interpretation of the results 

 obtained from the study of, by Profs. 

 W. H. Wilson and G. E. Smith, 875. 



Ceylon pearl banks, a recent visit to the, 

 by Prof. W. A. Herdman, 738. 



Character and educational efiiciency, 

 by T. P. GiU, 933. 



Charnwood rocks, the microscopical and 

 chemical composition of, interim report 

 on, 705. 



Chattaway (Dr. F. D.), the action of 

 halogens upon aromatic hydrazines, 

 662. 



some reactions of dichloro urea, 663. 



Chemical action, the dynamics of, and 

 the meaning of valency, by H. Bate- 

 man, 667. 



♦Chemical change, the nature of, dis- 

 cussion on, 665. 



Chemical Section, Address by Prof. 

 F. S. Kipping to the, 649. 



CmcK (Miss Harriette), the death-rate 

 of bacteria under the action of dis- 

 infectants, 901. 



Chinese earthquakes, a catalogue of, by 

 Shinobu Hirota, 82. 



Chisholm (G. G.) on the exploration of 

 Prince Charles Foreland, Spitsbergen, 

 306. 



Chree (Dr.) on magnetic observations at 

 Falmouth Observatory, 55. 



Clarke (Miss L. J.) on studies most 

 suitable for elementary schools, 495. 



school gardens, 931. 



♦Clear speaking and reading aloud, 

 discussion on, 939. 



Clerk (Dugald) on gaseous explosions, 



•^308. 



