INDEX. 



807 



Bather (Dr. F. A.) o?j life-zones in the 

 British carboniferous rocks, 302. 



on the compilation of an index 



generum et specierum animalittm, 314. 



notes on the index animalium, 570. 



Ba-Yaka, the ethnograpliy of the, by 

 T. A. Joyce and E. Torday, 688. 



Beacom (J. H.), irrigation in the United 

 States, 617. 



BeAEE (Prof. T. Hudson), the new 

 engineering laboratories, Edinburgh 

 University, and their equipment, 668. 



Beasley (H. C.) <m the fauna and flora 

 of the Trias of tlie British Isles, 

 293. 



report on footprints from the Trias: 



PaH IV., 299. 



Bkattie (Prof. J. C), on the magnetic 

 survey of South Africa, 131. 



results of magnetic observations in 



the Transkei and in Bechuanalaitd, 

 132. 



Bechuanaland, magnetic observations in, 

 by Prof J. C. Beattie, 132. 



♦Beilby (G. T.), the crystallisation of 

 gold in the solid state, 522. 



Ben Neris, meteorological observations on, 

 report on, 9 1 . 



Benson (A. C), the curriculum of secon- 

 dary schools, 788. 



♦Berkeley (Earl of), measurements of 

 osmotic pressure, 481. 



Bermuda Islands, the madreporaria of 

 the, report on, 325. 



Bernard (H. M.), traces of a periodic 

 law in organic evolution, 607. 



Bevan (Rev. J. 0.) on the morh of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 45. 



Bevan-Lewis (Dr. \V.), the neuron 

 theory : fatigue, rest, and sleep, 722. 



Beveeidge (VV. H.), labour exchanges 

 and the unemployed problem, 652. 



Bidder (G. P.). on the possibility of 

 Ankylostoma becoming a permanent 

 inhabitant of our coal mines in the 

 event of its introduction, 315. 



on the occupation of a table at the 



zoological station at Naples, 329. 



*Birds and mammals of Yorkshire, the, 

 by Oxley Grabham, 605. 



Blackman (Dr. F. F.) on the madre- 

 poraria of the Bermuda Islands, 325. 



Blackman (V. H.), the nature of fer- 

 tilisation, 754. 



Blakeslee (Dr. A. F.), zygospore ger- 

 minations in the mucorinese, 751. 



differentiation of sex in thallus, 



gametophyte, and sporophyte, 752. 



Bloxam (W. p.), a method of deter- 

 mining indigotin, 528. 



Bonar (Dr. J.), the inhabited hou.se 

 duty as a graduated tax, 642. 



Bonney (Dr. T. G) on seismological 

 investigations, 92. 



I Bonney (Dr. T. G.) on the origin of the 

 i Trias, 574. 



BOSANQUET (R. C.) on archceohgical and 

 ethnological researches in Crete, 408. 



— — excavations at Sparta in 1906, 692. 



Botanical photographs, the registration 

 of, report on, 433. 



Botanical Section, Address by Prof. F. W. 

 Oliver to the, 725. 



BOTTOMLEY (Dr. J. T.) on practical 

 electrical standards, 104. 



BOTTOMLEY (Prof. W. B.), the limestone 

 caves of Western Australia, 624. 



- — the cross-inoculation of leguminosae 

 and other root-nodule bearing plants, 

 752. 



nitrifying bacteria in the velamen 



of certain orchids, 753. 



BouLENGEE (G. A.) on the freshwater 

 fishes of South Africa, 326. 



Bourne (Prof. G. C.) on the influence of 

 salt and other solutions on the develop- 

 ment of the frog, 327. 



BOWLEY (A. L.), on the accuracy and 

 comparability of British and foreign 

 statistics of international trade, 3.'^9. 



Address to the Section of Economic 



Science and Statistics, 629. 



Boys (C. Vernon) on seismological investi- 

 gations, 92. 



on the investigation of the upper 



atmosphere by means of kites, 138. 



Brabrook (Sir Edward), Address to 

 the Conference of Delegates, 49. 



on anthropometric investigation in 



ths British Isles, 349. 



on excavations on Roman sites in 



Britain, 400. 



on the conditions of health essential 



to the carrifing on of the work of in- 

 struction in schools, 433. 



Brachyphyllum, the mesozoic genus, the 

 structure and wound-reactions of the, 

 by Prof. E. C. Jeffrey, 750. 



Bridge (Prof. T. "Vf.) on zoology organi- 

 sation, 326. 



British and foreign statistics of inter- 

 national trade, the accuracy and com- 

 parability of, third report on, 339. 



* British Association's visit to South 

 Africa, the, by H. Yule Oldham, 

 623. 



♦British crania in the possession of the 

 Yorkshire Philosophical Society, and 

 of crania from Lamel Hill, York, ex- 

 hibit of, by Dr. G. A. Auden, 698. 



Brodrick (H.) on faults as a predis- 

 posing cause of the existence of pot- 

 holes on Ingleborough, 559. 



and C. A. Hill on a recently dis- 

 covered skeleton in Scoska cave, Lit- 

 tondale, 698. 



Bromwich (T. J. I'A.), a test for the 

 convergence of multiple series, 493, 



