INDEX. 



References to reports and papers printed in extenso are given in Italics, 

 An aderisk * indicates that the title only of the communication is given. 

 The mark •{■ indicates the same, hut that a reference is given to the Journal or News 

 paper where the paper is published in eztenso. 



OBJECTS and Rules of the Association, 

 xxvii. 



Places and Times of Meeting, with 

 Presidents, Vice-Presidents, and Local 

 Secretaries, 1831-1906, xxxviii. 



Trustees and General Officers, 1831- 

 1006, liii. 



Presidents and Secretaries of Sections 

 from 1832, liv. 



Chairmen and Secretaries of the Con- 

 ferences of Delegates, Ixxv. 



Evening Discom'ses, Ixxv. 



Lectures to the Operative Classes, Ixxix. 



Officers of Sections present at York, 

 Ixxx. 



Committee of Recommendations, Ixxxi. 



Treasurer's account, Ixxxii. 



Table showing the attendance and re- 

 ceipts at the annual meetings, Ixxxiv. 



Officers and Council for 1906-1907, 

 Ixxxvi. . 



Report of the Council to the General 

 Committee, Ixxxvii. 



Resolutions passed by the General 

 Committee : — 



(1) Committees receiving grants of 



money, xci. 



(2) Committees not receiving grants 



of money, xcvii. 



(3) Papers ordered to be printed in 



extenso, c. 



(4) Resolutions referred to the 



Council for consideration, and 

 action if desirable, ci. 

 Synopsis of grants of money appropriated 



to scientific purposes in 1906, cii. 

 Places of meeting in 1907, 1908, and 1909, 



ciii. 

 General statement of sums which have 



been paid on account of grants for 



scientific purposes, civ. 

 General meetings, cxxiv. 



Address hy tlie President, Prof. E. Bay 

 Lankester, M.A., LL.D., F.H.S., 3. 



Abney (Sir W. de W.) on mave-length 

 tables of the spectra of the elements and 

 compounds, 161. 



on studies most suitable for elemen- 

 tary schools, 438. 



Aborigines of Sungei Ujong, the, by 

 F. W. Knocker, 688. 



Acclimatised plants, by W. Wilson, 744. 



Adams (Prot. W. G.) on magnetic obser- 

 vations at Falmouth Observatory , 90. 



on practical eleetncal standards, 



104. 



Adams (W. G. S.) mi the accuracy and 

 comparability of British and foreign 

 statistics of international trade, 339. 



Adeney (Dr. W. E.) on wave-length 

 tables of the spectra of the elements 

 and compounds, 161. 



Adie (R. H.) on studies most suitable 

 for elementary schools, 438. 



Mgean, early traces of human types in 

 the, by J. L. Mj-res, 700. 



Algal ecology and biology, by Miss F. 

 Rich, 758. 



Algal vegetation of ponds, the, by 

 Norman Walker, 758. 



*Allen (Dr. E. J.) on the relation of 

 scientific marine investigations to 

 practical fisliery problems, 608. 



Ammonium salt, the absorption of, by 

 clay and other soil constituents, by 

 A. D. Hall and C. T. Gimingham, 527. 



Anderson (Prof. R. J.) on the mam- 

 malian mandible, 610. 



on the manus of the dolphin, 610. 



Anderson (Dr. Tempest) on tlie fossili- 

 ferous drift deposits at Kirmington, 

 Lincolnshire, ^-c., 313. 



♦Andrews (Dr. C. W.), the milk den- 

 tition of the primitive elephants, 598. 



Andrews (E. M.) on the Webster ruin, 

 Rhodesia, 691. 



Anemoids, by Prof. W. H. Hudson, 483. 



Anglesey, the composition ond origin of 

 the crystalline rocks of, report on, 301. 



