970 



INDEX. 



Radio-active gases (emanations), do they 



belong to the argon series ? by Sir Wm. 



Ramsay, 601. 

 Radium, the number and absorption of 



the S particles emitted by, W. Makower 



on, 601. 

 * the rate of production of helium 



from, by Sir James Dewar, 602. 

 Radium emanation, the grating spec- 

 trum of, by T. Royds, 635. 

 Railways, the assessment of, for local 



taxation, the needed reform in, by F. 0. 



Lyons, 784. 

 the relation of, to the State, by 



W. M. Acworth, 773. 

 Irish, nationalisation of, by J. 



O'Connor, 784. 

 ♦Raised beeches of the Lifley Valley, G. H. 



Kinahan on the, 699. 

 Rajputs and Mahrattas, by W. Crook e, 



850. 

 Ramsay (Sir Wm.), do the radio-active 



gases (emanations) belong to the argon 



series ? 601. 



* the inactive gases, 672. 



Rawson (Col. H. E.), colour changes in 



flowers produced by controlling insola- 

 tion, 902. 

 Raylf.igh (Lord) on practical electrical 



standards, 31. 

 Read (Dr. C. H.) on the j)reparation of a 



new edition of Notes and Queries in 



Anthropology, 342. 



on the age of stone circles, 400, 



on the lake village at Glastonhnry, 414. 



on the collection of photographs of 



anthropological interest, 419. 



on the work of the Corresponding 



Societies Committee, .536. 



♦Read (John) and Trof. W. J. Pope, the 

 dynamic isomerism of oxymethylono 

 camphor derivatives, 661. 



Reeves (E. A.), now instruments for 

 travellers and surveyors, 766. 



Reflecting telescope, the, and its suit- 

 ability for physical research, by Sir 

 Howard Grubb, 605. 



Reichel (Sir H. R.) on studies most suit- 

 able for elementary schools, 495. 



Reid (A. S.) on the cxillection of photo- 

 graphs of geological interest, 245. 



Reid (Clement) on seismological investi- 

 gations, 60. 



on the fossiliferous drift deposits at 



Kirmington, Lincolnshire, rf-c, 296. 

 on the .sequence of' plant remains in 



certain peat deposits, 493. 

 Reid (Dr. G. Archdall), acquirement in 



education, 939. 

 Renisie (J.) on practical electrical 



standards, 31. 

 Re-stocking haunts whence fauna and 



flora have disappeared, the advisability 



of, by H. Davey, 5.50. 



♦Retinal photo-electro phenomena, cer- 

 tain features of. Prof. F. Gotch on, 876. 



Reynolds (Prof. S. H.) ow the collection of 

 photographs of geological interest, 245." 



on the pre- Devonian rocks of the 



Mendips and the Bristol area, 286. 

 and C. I. Gardiner, the igneous and 



associated sedimentary rocks of the 



Tourmakeady district, co. Mayo, 699. 

 Richardson (H.) on st^idies most suitable 



for elementary schools, 495. 

 on the curricula of secondary schools, 



526. 



on the sequence of studies in the 



science section of the curriculum, 526. 



Richardson (Nelson) on seismological 



investigations, 60. 

 Ridoeway (Prof. W.) on registering and 



classifying megalithic remains in the 



British Isles, 341. 



on excarations on Eoman sites in 



Britain, 342. 



on arch ecological and ethnographical 



researches in Crete, 344. 



■ Address to the Anthropological Sec- 



tion, 832. 

 Rivers (Dr. W. H. R.) on the preparation 



of a new edition of Notes and Queries in 



Anthropology, 342. 

 RoAE (Dr. H. E.), the digestive enzymes 



of invertebrates, 746. 

 and Prof. B. JIoore, the action of 



acid and alkali on the growth and 



division of animal and vegetable cells, 



883. 

 Robertson (Muriel), hasmatozoa from 



some Ceylon reptiles, 743. 

 ♦Robinson (R.), brazihn and haema- 



toxylin, 661. 

 ■j-RoBSON (P. W.), suction gas producers, 



826. 

 Rogers (A. R.) on topographical and geo- 

 logical terms used locally in South 



Africa, 291. 

 Roman Chester, recent excavations at, by 



Dr. R. Newstead, 853. 

 Roman sites in Britain, excavations on, 



report on, 342. 

 Rome in classical times, the four principal 



aqueducts of, by Dr. T. Ashby, 860. 

 RoscoE (Sir H. E.) on wave-length tables 



of the spectra, of the elements, 119. 

 RoSENHAiN (Walter), the study of 



breakages, 826. 

 Rotating discs, experiments on, by John 



Brown and M. F. FitzGerald, 830. 

 RoTCH (Prof. A. Lawrence), the warm 



stratum in the atmosphere at heights 



exceeding eight miles in the United 



States, 594. 

 Rothschild (Hon. Walter) on the com- 

 pilation of an index generum et 



specif.riim animalittm, 297. 



