INDEX. 



957 



Crystalline rocks of Aivjlesey, the comixi- 



sition and origm of the, third report on, 



283. 

 CuLVERWELL (Prof. E. P.), influence of 



mental values of types of education, 



940. 

 Cunningham (Lt.-Col. A.), factorisation 



of the A.P.F. of N = (2/"Tl), C15. \ 



Cunningham (Prof. D. J.) 07i the prepara- 

 tion of a neio edition of Notes and 



Queries in Anthropology, 342. 

 on anthropometric investigations 



in the British Isles, 351. 

 CuNNiNGTON (Dr. W. A.) and C. L. 



BouLENGEE, a biological expedition 



to the Birket el Qurun, Fayum 



province of Egypt, 732. 

 Cup- and ring-markings, by Rev. H. J. 



D. Astley, 862. 

 CuRRELLY (C. T.), a sequence of Egyptian 



stone implements, 848. 

 •Currents in the upper air of Egypt and 



the Sudan, observations of, by Capt. 



H. G. Lyons, G44. 

 Curricula of secondary schools, report on 



the, 526. ■ 

 Cutlery industry, industrial revolution 



in the, by G. I. H. Lloyd, 792. 

 Cycads, South African, second interim 



report on, and on ivelwilschia, 494. 



Dalby (Prof.)-o?i gaseous explosions, 308. 



Daniell (G. F. ) on the curricula of 

 secondary schools, 526. 



on the sequence of studies in the 



science section of the curriciiliun, 526. 



Daniell pile, an improved dry, by John 

 Brown, 623. 



Darwin (Dr. Francis), Presidential Ad- 

 dress, 3. 



D.iRwiN (Sir George) on the measurement 

 of a further portion of the geodetic arc of 

 meridian iwrth of Lake Tanganyika, 56. 



on seismological investigations, 60. 



Darwin (H.) on seismological investiga- 

 tions, 60. 



D.iuwiN (Major L.) on seismological 

 investigations, 60. 



♦Darwin (Miss Nora) and Dr. Black- 

 man, the death-rat of cells of higher 

 plants in fata,l conditions, 902. 



Davey (Henry), the advisability of 

 restocking haunts whence fauna and 

 flora have disai^peared, 550. 



Davies (Benjamin) and Sir Oliver 

 Lodge on the measurement of large 

 inductances containing iron, 620. 



Davis (Prof. W. M. ), glacial ero.sion 

 in North Wales, 705. 



the physiographical subdivisions 



of the Appalachian mountain system, 

 and their effects upon settlement and 

 Ijistory, 761. 



Davis (Prof. W. M.), the Colorado canyon, 



948. 

 Dawiuns (Prof. W. Boyd) on the age of 



stone circles, 400. 



on the lake village at Glastonhun/, 



414. 



the derivation of sand and clay 



from granite, 705. 



Day (F. E.) and J. L. Baker, the 

 ' preparation of pure maltose, 071. 

 Deaths under anaesthetics, the prevention 



of, by Dr. F. W. Hewitt, 872. 

 *Deccan basalt, the occurrencs of native 



iron in. Prof. J. Joly on, 703. 

 Dendrosoma radians, the structure of. 

 Prof. S. J. Hickson and J. T. Wads- 

 worth on, 744. 

 Dendy (Prof. A.) on the occupation of a 

 table at the marine laboratory, Ply- 

 mouth, 304. 

 Density of liquids at low temperatures, 



the, by Dr. J. Timmermans, 668. 

 Depopulation of Ireland, the, by R. H. 



Murray, 788. 

 Derb3'shiro limestones, the microscopical 

 structure of the, by Dr. H. H. Arnold- 

 Bemrose, 702. 

 Descii (Dr. C. H.) on dynamic isomerism, 



112. 

 Dewar (Prof. Sir J.) on wave-length 

 ' tables of the spectra of the elements, 119. 



* • the rate of production of helium 



from radium, 602. 



* • anticipations and experiments on 



the liquefaction of helium, 673. 

 Diaposematism, or the interchange of 

 characters between distasteful forms. 

 Dr. F. A. Dixey on, 733. 

 Dichloro urea, some reactions of, by 



Dr. F. D. Chattaway. 663. 

 Dicotyledons, the origin of, by W. C. 



Woi-sdell, 911. 

 Digestive enzymes of invertebrates, the, 



by Dr. H. E. Roaf, 746. 



Dines (J. S.), the results of the 'ballons- 



sondes ' ascents in the British Isles, 



July 27-Aug. 1, 1908, 642. 



Dines (W. H. ) on the investigation of the 



upper atmosphere by yneans of kites, 59. 



Dinlca laws and customs, a collection of, 



E. Sidney Hartland on, 850. 

 Dinosaurian footprints in the lower ooUte 

 at Whitby, on casts of, by H. Brodrick, 

 707. 

 Discussions : — 



on the isothermal layer of the atmo- 

 sphere, 591. 

 *on gaseous explosions, 595. 

 on the theory of wave- motion, 605. 

 *on the nature of chemical change, f>65. 

 on problems of fermentation, (i7 1. 

 *on peat, 676. 



on mountain building, 708. j 



on determination of sox, 738, ■ ' ' 



