818 



INDEX. 



Martin (A. J.), a general supplj- of gas 



for light, heat, and power production, 



671. 

 Mathematical and Physical Section, Ad- 

 dress by Principal E. H. Griffiths to 



the, 471. 

 MATLEy (Dr. C. A.) on the crystalline 



roclis of Anglesey, 301. 

 Matthey (G.) on 2>'>'actioal electrical 



standards. 104. 

 Mechanics, the teaching of, by experi- 

 ment, C. B. Ashford on, 673. 

 *Medical inspection of schools, by Dr. 



Ethel Williams, 776. 

 3Ielandra Castle, Derhyshlre, excavations 



on the site of, 1905, 405. 

 Melanism in Yorkshire lepidoptera, hy 



G. T. Porritt, 316. 

 Meldola (Prof. K.) on the work of the 



Corresponding Societies Committee, 45. 



on seismological investigations, 92. 



Meliacese, the root anatomy of the, by 



W. J. Gallagher, 749. 

 Melville (E. H. V.) on the quantity and 



coynposition of rainfall and of lake and 



river discharge, 330. 

 Meredith (H! O.) on the accuracy a')id 



comparability of British and foreign 



statistics of internitional trade, 339. 

 the Workers' Educational Associa- 

 tion : an experiment in the organisation 



of working-class education, 777. 

 ' Metabolic balance sheet ' of the individual 



tissiies, report on the, 426. 

 Metabolism, the, concurrent with heat 



production in some aroids, by Miss C. 



B. Sanders, 739. 

 Meteorological observations on Ben Nems, 



report on, 91. 

 Meteorological phenomena, telescopic 



observations of, by Miss C. 0. Stevens, 



499. 

 Meteorology and local societies, by Br. 



H. R. Mill, 53. 

 Miall (Prof. L. C.) on the registration 



of botanical photographs, 433. 

 on the conditions of health essential 



to the carrying on of the work of instruc- 

 tion in schools, 433. 

 MiBRS (Prof. H. A.) and Miss F. Isaac on 



the temperature at which water freezes 



in sealed tubes, 522. 

 *Milk dentition of the primitiveelephants, 



the, by Dr. C. W. Andrews, 598. 

 Mill (Dr. H. R.) on the work of the 



Corresponding Societies Committee, 45. 



local societies and meteorology, 53. 



on the investigation of the uijper 



atmosphere by means of kites, 138. 

 on the quantity and composition of 



rainfall and of lake and river discharge, 



330. 

 on investigations in. tlie Indian 



Ocean, 331. 



Milne (J.) on seismoloqical inve.itigations, 

 82. 



certain earthquake relationships. 



673. 

 Minchin (Prof . E. A.) on zoology organiia- 



tion, 326. 



spicule formation, 605. 



^Minimal diet values, the factors which 



determine, discussion on, 527. 

 Mitchell (Sir A.) on the effect of climate 



vpon health and disease, 424. 

 Mitchell (Dr. P. C.) on zoology organisa- 

 tion, 326. 

 IModern armour and its attack, by 



Major W. E. Edwards, 666. 

 *Monkeys, the infection of with guinea 



worm, some results of, by Dr. R. T. 



Leiper, 600. 

 Monthly index numbers of prices for 



1906, hy C. S. Howells and H. S. 



Jevons, 655. 

 Moon, the radiation of heat from the, 



Earl of Rosse on, 500. 

 Moore (J. E. S.), halolimnic faunas and 



the Tanganyika problem, 601. 

 Morgan (Prof. C. Lloyd) on zoology 



organisation, 326. 

 Morrison (Prof.) on the magnetic survey 



of South Africa, 131. 

 ♦Mortimer (J. R.) on the relative stature 



of the men with long heads, short 



heads, and those with intermediate 



heads, in the museum at Driffield, 



699. 

 Moss (C. B.), succession of plant forma- 

 tions in Britain, 742. 

 MucorineaB, zygospore germinations in 



the, by Dr. A. F. Blakeslee, 751. 

 Muff (H. B.) on the fossiliferovs drift 



deposits at Kirmington, Lincolnshire, 



,fc., 313. 

 MuiRHEAD (Dr. A.) 071 2}ra^tical electri- 

 cal standards, 104. 

 ♦Mvillerian mimicry among African 



butterflies, a remarkable example of, 



by Prof E. B. Poulton, 601. 

 Multiple series, a test for the convergence 



of, by T. J. FA. Bromwioh, 493. 

 Munro (Dr. R.) on the age of stone 



circles, 370. 

 '. on the lake village at Glastonbury, 



410. 

 Murray (James), the survey of the 



Scottish lochs : summary of work, 



1902-6, 619. 

 Murray (Sir John) on meteorological 



observations on Ben Nevis, 91. 

 on the quantity and compositio7i oj 



rainfall and of lake and river discharge, 



330. 

 on investigations in the Indian 



Ocean, 331. 

 Murray (Dr. W. C. F.) on the effect of 



climate upon health and disease, 424. 



