810 



INDEX. 



Dendy (Prof. A.), the pineal sense 

 organs and associated structures in 

 Geotria and Sphenodon, 604. 



Design in Greek and Turkish embroi- 

 deries, the evolution of, Miss L. F. 

 Pesel on, 692. 



Dewae (Prof. Sir J.) on wm-e-length 

 tables of the spectra of tlte elements and 

 compounds, 161. 



Diamonds in the matrix, an occurrence 

 of, at Oakey Creek, near Inverell, 

 N.S.W., by Prof. T. W. E. David, 562. 



*Diet values, minimal, the factors which 

 determine, discussion on, 723. 



Differential equations, partial, integrals 

 of, the different kinds of, by Prof. 

 A. E. Forsyth, 486. 



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

 tipper atmosphere by means of kites, 138. 



Discussions : — 

 On radio-activity and the internal 



structure of the earth, 491 . 

 *0n the factors which determine 



minimal diet values, 527. 

 On the origin of the Trias, 574. 

 *0n fertilisation, 603 

 *0n the physical character of the 



races of Britain, 699. 

 *0n the physiological value of rest, 722. 

 *0n the factors which determine 

 minimal diet values, 723. 



Distribution, the theory of, by Prof. 

 F. Y. Edgeworth, 642. 



Disturbed areas of the solar surface and 

 the solar corona, the connection be- 

 tween, Rev, A. L. Cortie on, 499. 



Divers (Dr. E.) o» the study of hydro- 

 aromatic substances, 257. 



DiXBY (Dr. F. A.) on epigamic and 

 aposematic scents in Ehopalocera, 600. 



Dixon (Prof. A. C), expansions in pro- 

 ducts of oscillating functions, 483. 



Dixon (Prof. A, F.) on anthropometric 

 investigation in the British Isles, 349. 



DOBBIE (Dr. J. J.) on dynamic iso- 

 merism, 157. 



Dolphin, the raanus of the. Prof. R. J. 

 Anderson on, 610. 



Domestic science, the training of the 

 teacher of, by Miss M. E. Marsden, 

 784. 



♦Domestic science teacher, the moral and 

 economic standpoint of the, by Miss 

 Maud Taylor, 786. 



Domestic subjects, the duty of education 

 authorities to the nation respecting 

 the teaching of, by Mrs. M. E. Pillow, 

 786. 



DoNCASTER (L.), the maturation of par- 

 thenogenetic eggs, 755. 



DOKNAN (S. S.) on the Bushmen of 

 Basutoland, 689. 



Drummond-Feaser (D.), the gold re- 

 serve, 645. 



Duckworth (Dr. W. H. L.) on anthro- 

 pometric investigation in the JBritish 

 Isles, 349. 



a rare anomaly in human crania 



from Kwaiawata Island, New Guinea, 

 703. 



observations made on an ' eunu- 

 choid' subject in the Cambridge 

 anatomy school, 703. 



Ductile materials under combined stress, 

 the strength and behaviour of, by 

 W. A. Scoble, 674. 



Ductless glands, second inteHm report 

 on the, 423. 



DUPPIELD (W. G.), photographs of the 

 arc spectrum of iron under high pres- 

 sure, 481. 



DUNSTAN (Prof. W.), Address to the 

 Chemical Section, 510. 



and Dr. T. A. Henry, the chemical 



aspects of cyanogcnesis in plants, 145. 



♦Dutch East Indies, chemical research in 

 the, by Dr. Greshoff, 523. 



Dwerryhouse (A. R.) on thefossiliferous 

 drift deposits at Kirmington, Lincoln- 

 shire, ^c, 313. 



Byera costulata, the latex of, by Prof. 

 W. A. Tilden, 525. 



*Dymond (T. S.), adapting rural educa- 

 tion to the needs of rural life, 778. 



Bynamic isomerism, report on, 157. 



*Dybon (Prof. F. W.), spectroscopic ob 

 servations of solar eclipses, 491. 



Earthquake relationships, certain, by Dr. 



J. Milne, 573. 

 ♦Earth's pole, the irregular motions of 



the, by Major E. H. Hills and Prof. 



J. Larmor, 490. 

 Eastern Mendips, a silurian inlier in 



the, by Prof. S. H. Reynolds, 580. 

 a picrite from the, by Prof. S. H. 



Reynolds, 581. 

 Ecological work in Switzerland, by Dr, 



T. W. Woodhead, 741. 

 Economic Science and Statistics, Address 



to the Section of, by A. L. Bowley, 



629. 

 Economic theory and proposals for a 



legal minimum wage, by H. B. Lees 



Smith, 653. 

 Edgeworth (Prof. F. Y.), theory of dis- 

 tribution, 642. 

 Edridge-Green (Dr. F. W.) on hue per- 

 ception, 724. 

 Education, physical, by Sir Lauder 



Brunton, 776. 

 ♦Education, rural, the adapting of, to the 



needs of rural life, by T. S. Dymond, 



778. 

 ♦Education of wage-earners of school 



age, by Mrs. M. E. Macdonald, 778. 



