INDEX. 



809 



Cock's comb, the evolution of the, by 

 J. T. Cunningham, 603. 



Cole (Prof. G. A. J.), the teaching of 

 geology to agricultural scholars, 569. 



-. on the origin of the Trias, 576. 



Colour pliyswhgy of the higher Crustacea, 

 repoi't on the, 325. 



Concentration of a solution, the effects 

 of the presence of an excess of undis- 

 solved salt upon the A. Vernon Har- 

 court on, 521. 



Conditions of health essential to the 

 carrying on of the ivork of i7istruction 

 in schools, report on the, 433. 



Conway (Prof. R S.), the Keltic weights 

 found in a Roman camp (Melandra, 

 near Glossop), 696. 



Cooper (Miss A. J.) on studies most 

 suitable for elementary schools, 438. 



Corn smuts and their propagation, by 

 Prof. T. Johnson, 743. 



Cornish (Dr. Vaughan) on the work of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 45. 



Corresponding Societies Committee: — 

 Report, 45. 



Conference at York, 47. 

 List of Corresponding Societies, 68. 

 Papers published by Corresponding 

 Societies, 73. 



CORTTB (Rev. A. L.) on the connection 

 between disturbed areas of the solar 

 surface and the solar corona, 499. 



CoTSWORTH (M. B.) on the continuous 

 glacial period, 573. 



County photographic surveys, the desira- 

 bility of promoting, by W.J. Harrison, 58. 



tCowPER-CoLES (S.), electro-positive 

 coatings for the protection of iron 

 and steel from corrosion, 674. 



Cramp (W.) and S. Leetham, the elec- 

 trical discharge in air and its commer- 

 cial application, 520. 



Creak (Capt. E. W.) on mag^ietic observa- 

 tions at Falmouth Observatory, 90. 



on investigations in the Indian 



Ocean, 331. 



Crete, archteological and ethnological re- 

 searches in, report on, 408. 



Crick (G. C) 07i life-zones in the British 

 carboniferous rocks, 302. 



*Cropt.S(W. H.)andProf. P.F. KENDALL 

 on the plain of marine denudation 

 beneath the drift of Holderness, 581. 



Crossley (Prof. A. W.) on the study of 



hydro-aromatic substances, 257. 

 Crystalline rocks of Anglesey, the comjyo- 

 sition and origin of, report on, 301. 



♦Crystallisation of gold in the solid state, 

 the, by G. T. Beilby, 522. 



'Cullinan ' diamond, Dr. F. H. Hatch on 

 the, 563. 



CuLPiN (H.) and G. Grace, recent ex- 

 posures of glacial drift at Doncaster 

 and Tickhill, 559. 



Cunningham (Lieut.-Col. A.) on resi- 

 dues of hyper-even numbers, 485. 



CUNNINQHAM (Prof. D. J.) on anthropo- 

 metric investigations among the native 

 troops of the Egyptian army, 347. 



on anthropometric investigation in 



the British Isles, 349. 



Cunningham (J. T.), the evolution of 

 the cock's comb, 603. 



Cupuliferse, the root anatomy of the, by 

 W. J. Gallagher, 749. 



Curriculum, the overbalanced, by A. 

 Rowntree, 792. 



Cyanogenesis in jdants, the chemical 

 aspects of, by Prof. W. Buns tan and 

 Dr. T. A. Henry, 145. 



Cycads, South African, interim report 

 on, 431. 



the habitats, habits, and associates 



of some, by Prof. H. H. W. Pearson, 

 738. 



fDALBY (Prof. W. E.), experiments illus- 

 trating the balancing of engines, 672. 



■(• suction gas-engine plants, 674. 



Dalton (VV. H.) and F. W. Rudler on 

 the ' red hills ' of the East coast salt- 

 marshes, 693. 



Danford (C. G.) on the Speeton ammo- 

 nites, 560. 



*Darbishire (A. D.) on a new concep- 

 tion of segregation, 603. 



Darbishire (Dr. F. V.) and Dr. E. J. 

 Russell, oxidation in soils and its 

 relation to productiveness, 528. 



Darwin (Francis) on the. registration of 

 botanical photographs, 433. 



Darwin (Sir G.) on seismological investi- 

 gations, 92. 



Darwin (H.) on seismological investiga- 

 tions, 92. 



Darwin (Major L.) ou seismological 

 investigations, 92. 



David (Prof. T. W. E.), an occurrence of 

 diamonds in the matrix at Oakey 

 Creek, near Inverell, N.S.W.,562 ; *fur- 

 ther note thereon, 579. 



on the permo-carboniferous coal- 

 fields of Australasia, 576. 



■fDAViES (S. H.) and F. G. Fryer, the 

 removal of dust and smoke from chim- 

 ney gases, 666. 



Davis (Prof. W. M.) on the quantity and 

 composition of rainfall and of lake and 

 rirer discharge, 330. 



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

 stone circles, 370. 



excavations on Roman sites in 



on 



Britain, 400. 

 on the lake village at Glastonhury , 



410. 

 Deformation and fracture of iron and 



steel, the, by W. Rosenhain, 666. 



