IXDEX. 



819 



Myebs (Dr. C. S.) on, anthropometric 

 invest 'Kjations among the native troojis 

 of the Egyptian army, 347. 



— — ■ on anthropometrio investigation in 

 the British Isles, 349. 



* nasal and cephalic indices in dif- 

 ferent parts of Egypt, 701. 



Myres (J. L.) on anthropometric in- 

 vestigation in the British Isles, 349. 



. mi the collection of photographs of 



anthropological intereit, 383. 



on excavations on Itoman sites in 



Britain, 400. 



— on archirological and eth7iological 

 researches in Crete, 408. 



— early traces of human types in the 

 .Egean, 700. 



Narm&,shir, an account of the ancient 

 cities of, by Major P. M. Sykes, 

 620. 



*Nasal and cephalic indices in different 

 parts of Egypt, by Dr. C. S. Myers, 

 701. 



Nasmxth (Dr. G. G.) and D. A. L. 

 Graham, the hrematology of carbon 

 monoxide poisoning, 723. 



*Nerve fibres, granular changes in, by 

 Prof. J. S. Macdonald, 717. 



Neuron theory, the : fatigue, rest, and 

 sleep, by Dr. W. Bevan-Lewis, 722 



Newstead, near Melrose, excavations at, 

 1905-C, 406. 



Newton (Prof. A.) on the zoology of the 

 Sandwich Islands, 315. 



Newtox (E. T.) on the fauna and flora 

 of the Trias of the British Isles, 293. 



on the fossiliferovs drift deposits 



at Kirmingto7i, Lincolnshire, (^-c, 

 313. 



Nickel wire, structural changes in, at 

 high temperatures, by H. C. H. Car- 

 penter, 667. 



Nitrification of sewage in shallow filters 

 vv^ith line particles, the, by Dr. G. Eeid, 

 717. 



Nitrogen excretion under normal condi- 

 tions, some determinations of, by E. P. 

 Poulton, 720. 



♦Nitrogen in air, the utilisation of, by 

 plants, by T. Jamieson, 523. 



Nitrogenous metabolism in normal indi- 

 viduals, by Dr. J. M. Hamill, 718. 



NoOEDUi.JN (C. L. W.), breeding experi- 

 ments in canaries : an exception to 

 Mendel's law, 603. 



*North Sea fisheries, the international 

 investigation of the, by Dr. W. Gar- 

 stang, 608. 



NUTTALL (G. H. F.) on the 2)ossibility of 

 Ankylostoma becoming a permanent 

 inhahitnnt of mir coal mines in the 

 event of its introduction, 315. 



*Oi.DHAM (11. Yule), the visit of the 

 British Association to South Africa, 

 623. 



Oldham (E. D.) on seisinological investi' 

 gations, 93. 



a criterion of the glacial erosion of 



lake-basins, 579. 



OLiVKR(Prof. F. W.) on the structure of 

 fossil plants, 432. 



Address to the Botanical Section, 



725. 



Omond (R. T.) on meteorological olstrva- 

 tions on Ben Nevis, 91. 



Orchids, nitrifying bacteria in the 

 velamen of certain, by Prof. W. B. 

 Bottomley, 753. 



Organic evolution, traces of a periodic 

 law in, by IT. M. Bernard, 607. 



Oeton (Prof. K. P. J.) on the transfor- 

 mation of aromatic nitroamines and 

 allied substances, and its relation to 

 substitution in benzene derivatives, 

 159. 



Oscillating functiocs, expansions in pro- 

 ducts of,by Prof. A. C. Dixon, 483. 



♦Osmotic pressure, measurements of, by 

 the Earl of Berkeley, 481. 



Owen (Rev. E. C), inspection and regu- 

 lation of schools, 792. 



Oxidation in soils and its relation to 

 productiveness, by Drs. F. V. Darbi- 

 shire and E. J. Russell, 528. 



Ozone gas, nearly pure, researches ob, 

 by Dr. E. Ladenburg, 505. 



Page (T. E.), the curriculum of secon- 

 dary schools, 787. 



PaL-eozoic botany, some aspects of the 

 present position of, by Dr. D. H. 8cott, 

 745. 



Palasozoic glaciations of Australia and 

 South Africa, the problem of the, by 

 Prof. J. W. Gregory, 576. 



Palaikastro, excavations at, 409. 



Palgeave (R. H. Inglis), the specie 

 reserve of the United Kingdom, 643. 



Parkinson (John), the post-cretaceous 

 stratigraphy of Southern Nigeiia, 

 W.C.A., 561. 



• the structure of Southern Nigeria, 



622. 



Parthenogenetic eggs, the maturation of, 

 by L. Doncaster, 755. 



Peach (Dr. B. N.) on life-zones in the 

 British carboniferous rocks, 302. 



Pearson (Prof. H. H. W.), some South 

 African cycads : their habitats, habits, 

 and associates, 738. 



Peat moss deposits, interim report on, 

 430. 



Peet (T. E.) on the prehistoric civilisa- 

 tion of South Italy, with special re- 

 ference to Campania, 692. 



3g 2 



