INDEX. 



821 



Priissie acid in the rcgctnhle Jdnf/dom, the 

 dixtribidwn of, hj Dr. M. Greslwff, \i\%. 



Pseudo-monocotyledons, the seedlings 

 of certain, by A. W. Hill, 763. 



* Purpura, sterile eggs of, by Prof P. 

 Pelseneer, 607. 



*Pygmy flints from Yorkshire and Lin- 

 colnshire, by Rev. R. Scott-Gatty, 695. 



*Racial characters, demonstration of the 

 methods of determining, by Dr. F. C. 

 Shrubsall, 698. 



Racial types, demonstration of photo- 

 graphs of, by T. E. Smurthwaite, 702. 



Radiation from gas mantles, by J. Swin- 

 burne, 503. 



Radiation of heat from the moon, the 

 Earl of Rosse on the, 500. 



tRadiation phenomena, recent advances 

 in our knowledge of, and their bearing 

 on the optical measurement of tem- 

 perature, by J. B. Henderson, 674. 



Radio-activity and the internal structure 

 of the earth, Hon. R.J. Strutt on, 491. 



Railway cost statistics, R. L. Wedgwood 

 on, 647. 



Railway tickets, cheap, for workmen In 

 Belgium, by Prof. E. Mahaim, 646. 



Raivfall, the quantity and cmnj/osition of, 

 and oflalie and river diseharge, interim 

 report on, 330. 



Rainfall periodogram. Profs. A. Schuster 

 and H. H. Turner on the, 498. 



Ramsay (Sir W.) and Dr. J. F. Spencer, 

 chemical and electrical changes in- 

 duced by ultra-violet light, 504. 



Ramsay (Prof. W. M.), past and present 

 in Asiatic Turkey, 625. 



Randall-MacIvee (D.) oti anthropo- 

 metric investigation in the British Isles, 

 349. 



Range-finder, a new form of, by B. A. 

 Reeves, 627. 



Rayleigh (Lord) on practical electrical 

 standards, 104. 



Read (C. H.) un the work of the Corre- 

 sponding Societies Committee, 45. 



on the age of stone circles, 370. 



on the collection of photographs of 



atithropologioal interest, 383. 



on the lake village at Glastonhury, 



410. 



'Red hills' of the East coast saltmarshes, 

 F. W. Rudler and W. H. Dalton on the, 

 693. 



Reeves (E. A.), a new form of tacheo- 

 meter or range finder, 627. 



Reichel (Principal) on studies most suit- 

 able for elementary schools, 438. 



Reid (Clement) on seismological inves- 

 tigations, 92. 



on the fossiliferous drift deposits at 



Kirmimgton, Lincolnshire, 4'c., 313. 



I Reid (Clement) on peat moss deposits, 430. 



coa.st erosion, 621. 



Reid (Prof. E. Way mouth) on the state 



of solution of proteids, 428. 

 Reiu (Dr. G.), the nitrification of sewage 



in shallow filters with fine particles, 

 717. 

 Rennie (J.) on practical electrical 



standards, 104. 

 Resistances, the comjiarison of, methods 



of high precision for, F. E. Smith on, 



106. 

 Reynolds (Prof. S. H.), a silnrian inlier 



in the Eastern Mendips, 580. 

 igneous rocks of the districts S.W. 



of Dolgelly, 681. 

 a picrite from the Eastern Mendips, 



581. 

 lihopahcera, epigamic and aposematic 



scents in. Dr. A. F. Dixey on, 600. 

 Rhynchosaurus articeps {On-en), Dr. A. 



Smith Woodward on, 293. 

 Rich (Miss F.), algal ecology and bio- 

 logy, 758. 

 Richardson (A. R.), many-valued func- 

 tions of real variables, 494. 

 Richardson (H.) on studies most suitable 



for elementary schools, 438. 



the vegetation of Teneriffe, 739. 



Richardson (Nelson) on seismological 



investigations, 92. 

 Ridgeway (Prof. W.) on excavations on 



Roman sites in Britain, 400. 

 on archieological and ethnological 



researches in Crete, 408. 

 the origin of the guitar and fiddle, 



691. 

 Rivers (Dr. W. H. R.), the astronomy 



of the Torres Straits Islanders, 701. 



a survival of two- fold origin, 702. 



*RoAF (Dr.) and Prof. Sherrington on 



the mechanism of the locked jaw of 



tetanus, 723. 

 Robertson (Prof. J. a.), the position of 



German in the educational curriculum, 



800. 

 Robinson (G. G.), the preparatory school 



curriculum, 789. 

 Robinson (H. H.) on the j'reseJit position 



of the chemistry of the gums, 227. 

 * on a gum (^Cochlospervnim gos.iy- 



pimn) which produces acetic acid on 



exposure to air, 526. 

 Roman and other remains from South 



Ferriby, T. Sheppard on, 695. 

 Roman forum, recent excavations in the, 



by Dr. T. Ash by, jun., 696. 

 Boman sites in Britain, excavations on, 



report on, 400. 

 *Romburgh (Prof. Van), the 1:3:5- 



hexatrien, 521. 

 ROSCOE (Sir H. B.) on wave-length tables 



of the spectra of the elements and com- 

 ])ounds, 161. 



