814 



INDEX. 



Halliburton (Prof. W. D.) on the state 



of solution of proteids, 428. 

 Halolimnic faunas and the Tanganyika 

 problem, by J. E. S. Moore, 601. 



by Prof. P. Pelseneer, 602. 



Hamill (Dr. J. M.), nitrogenous meta- 

 bolism in normal individuals, 718. 



Hamilton (C. J.), the unemployed, 

 651, 



Haecouet (A. Vernon) on the effects 

 upon the concentration of a solution 

 of the presence of an excess of undis- 

 solved salt, 521. 



Haekeb (A.) on the crystalline rooks of 

 Anglesey, 301. 



Harmee (F. W.) onthefossiliferous drift 

 deposits at Kirmi'ngton, lAiicolnshvre, 

 ^c., 313. 



the glacial deposits of the East of 



England, 570. 



Lake Oxford and the Goring Gap, 



572. 



Haeeibs (Prof. C. D.) on the constitu- 

 tion of caoutchouc, 523. 



*HAEEiaON (Miss Lucy) on the cultiva- 

 tion of literary taste, 800. 



Haerison (W. J.), the desirability of 

 promoting county photographic sxi/rveys, 

 58. 



Haetland (E.Sidney) o« the collection of 

 photograph* of anthropological interest, 

 383. 



Address to the Anthropological Sec- | 



tion, 675. 



Hartley (Prof. W. N.) on wave-length 

 tables of the spectra of the elements and \ 

 compounds, 161. 



Hartog (Prof. M.) on zoology organisa- 

 tion, 326. 



♦Hatch (Dr. F. H.) on the 'CuUinan' 

 diamond, 563. 



Havet (Prof. T.), formation of the true 

 nucleoli or plasmosomes of the soma- 

 tic cells, 757. 



Health and disease, the effect of climate 

 upon, report on, 424. 



Hbawood (B.) on the collection of photo- 

 graphs of anthivpological interest, 383. 



Heller (W. M.) on studies most suitable 

 for elementary scJwols, 438. 



the constructive work of an in- 

 spector of schools, 795. 



tHENDERSON (J. B.), recent advances in 

 our knowledge of radiation pheno- 

 mena, and their bearing on the optical 

 measurement of temperature, 674. 



*Henbioi (Prof, O.) on the notation and 

 use of vectors, 482. 



Henry (Dr, T. A.) and Prof, W. Dunstan, 

 the chemical aspects of cyanogenesis in 

 plants, 145. 



Hensman (Miss R.) and Prof. T. John- 

 son, six years' seed-testing in Ireland, 

 744. 



Hebbertson (Dr. A. J.) on the quantity 



and Gomjjositlon of rainfall and of lake 



and river discharge, 330. 

 on studies most suitable for elemen- 

 tary schools, 438. 

 Heedman (Prof. W, A.) on the work of 



the Corresponding Societies Committee, 



45, 

 on the fauna amd flora of the Trias 



of the British Isles, 293. 

 — on tlie madreporaria of the Bermuda 



Islands, 325. 



mi zoology organisation, 326. 



on investigations in the Indian 



Ocean, 331. 

 Hewitt (Dr. J. T.) on the transformation 



of aromatic nitroamines and allied mb- 



stances, and its relation to substitution 



in benzene derivatives, 159. 

 *Hexatrien : the 1:3: 5-hexatrien, by 



Prof. Van Romburg, 521. 

 Hickson (Prof, S. J,) on the zoology of 



the Sandwich Islajids, 315. 

 on the madreporaria of the Bermuda 



Islands, 325. 



on the colour physiology of the higher 



Crustacea, 325. 



on zoology organisation, 326, 



— - on the influence of salt ajid other 

 solutions OH the development of the 

 frog, 327. 



on the occupation of a tabic at the 



zoological station at Naples, 329. 



on investigations in tlie Indian 



Ocean, 331. 



Hill (A. W.), the seedlings of cerlain 

 pseudo-monocotyledons, 763. 



Hill(C. A.) and Habold Beodrick, 

 on a recently discovered skeleton in 

 Scoska Cave, Littondale, 698. 



Hill (T. G.) on the seedling structure 

 of certain centrospermse, 760. 



and E. de Fraine on the seedling 



structure of gymnosperms, 759, 



Hills (Major E.H.), proposed remeasure- 

 ment of geodetic arcs in the United 

 Kingdom, 626. 



* and Prof. J, Larmor, the irregular 



motions of the earth's pole, 490. 



Hilton (Harold) on finite groups, 492. 



Himalayas, the Central, and adjacent 

 parts of Tibet, a journey in, by T. G. 

 Longstaff, 627. 



■^HiME (Dr.), are the preventive measures 

 which are employed against infectious 

 diseases effective ? 718, 



Hind (Dr, Wheelton) on Dr.A.Vaugh' 

 an's researches on the faunal succes- 

 sion in the carboniferous limestone of 

 the South-west of England, 292. 



on life-zones in the British carboni- 

 ferous rocks, 302. 



Hinde (Dr. G. J.) on life-iones in the 

 British carboniferous rocks, 302. 



