INDEX. 



823 



Seward (A. C.) on tho fauna and flora 

 of the Trias of the Uritish Isles, i!93. 



on the madreporaria of the Ber- 

 muda Islands, 325. 



on South African cycads, i31. 



on the structvre of fossil plants, 432. 



- . the Jurassic plants from the rocks 

 of East Yorkshire, 568. 



Sex, differentiation of, in thallus, game- 

 tophyte, and sporophyte, by Dr. A. F. 

 lilakeslee, 752. 



Shakp (Dr. D.) on the zoology of the 

 Sandwich Islands, 315. 



Shaw (Dr. W. N.) on practical elec- 

 trical standards, 101. 



on the investigation of the upper 



atmosphere hy means of kites, 138. 



Shaw (Mrs. W. N.) on studies most suit- 

 able for elementary schools, 438. 



Sheppard (Thomas) on the fossiliferous 

 drift deposits at Kirmingion, Lincoln- 

 shire, ^'c, 313. 



on a section in a post-glacial 



lacustrine deposit at Hornsea, 581. 



excavations in an Anglo-Saxon 



cemetery near South Cave, Yorkshire, 

 695. 



• on some Roman and other remains 



from South Ferriby, 695. 

 Sherrington (Prof. C. S.) on the niadre- 



2>oraria of the Bermuda Islands, 325. 

 on the conditio7is of health essential 



to the carrying on of the work of 



instriictionin schools, 433. 

 * and Dr. Roap on the mechanism of 



the locked jaw of tetanus, 723. 

 Shipley (A. E.) on the possibility of 



Ankylostoma becoming a permanent 



inhabitant of our coal mines in the 



event of its introduction, 315. 

 — — on zoology organisation, 326. 

 Shore (Dr. L. E.) on the ductless 



glaiuls, 423. 

 Shrubsall (Dr. F. C.) on anthropometric 



investigation in the British Isles, 349. 

 * demonstration of the methods of 



determining racial characters, 698. 

 - the races of South Africa, 703. 



Silohestcr, excavations at, 1905, 406. 



Silurian inlier, a, in the Eastern Men- 

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



Single-phase electric traction, the ad- 

 vent of, by C. F. Jenkin, 670. 



Skeleton, a recently discovered, in 

 Scoska Cave, Littondale, Harold 

 Brodrick and G. A. Hill on, 698. 



Smith (E. A.) on the zoology of the Sand- 

 wich Islands, 315. 



Smith (F. E.) on methods of high pre- 

 cision for the compa/rison of resistances, 

 106. 



Smith (H. B. Lees), economic theory 

 and proposals for a legal minimum 

 wage, 653 



f Smith (J.), an application of stream- 

 line apparatus to the determinatiou of 

 the directions and approximate mag- 

 nitudes of the principal stresses in 

 certain portions of the structure of 

 ships, 673. 



Smith (W. G.) on the registration of 

 botanical photographs, 433. 



Smithells (Prof. A.) on studies most 

 suitable for elementary schools, 438. 



school training for home duties of 



women, 781. 



Smurthwaitb (T. E.), demonstration 

 of photographs of racial types, 702. 



Snaps (Dr. Lloyd) on studies most sicit- 

 able for elementary schools, 438. 



Sodalite, a remarkable form of, from 

 Rajputana, by T. H. Holland, 663. 



SoDDY (F.), the evolution of the elements, 

 122. 



*Solar eclipses, spectroscopic observa- 

 tions of, by Prof. F. W. Dyson, 491. 



Solution of proteids, fourth report on tlie 

 state of, 428. 



Somatic cells, formation of the true 

 nucleoli or plasmosomes of the, by 

 Prof. T. Havet, 757. 



South Africa, the magnetic survey of, 

 prelimiyiary report on, 131. 



the freshwater fishes of, interim 



report on, with special reference to 

 those of the Zambesi, 326. 



* the visit of the British Association 



to, by H. Yule Oldham, 623. 



* the ethnology of, by Dr. A. C. 



Haddon, 690. 



* the races of, by Dr. F. G. Shrub- 

 sail, 703. 



South Africa Medal Fund, 801. 



South African cycads, interim report on, 

 431. 



the habitats, habits, and associates 



of some, by Prof. H. H. W. Pearson, 

 738. 



*South African vegetation, some impres- 

 sions of, by Prof. R. H. Yapp, 758. 



South Italy, the prehistoric civilisation 

 of, with special reference to Cam- 

 pania, T. E. Peet on, 692. 



Southern Nigeria, W.C.A., the post- 

 cretaceous stratigraphy of, by J. Park- 

 inson, 561. 



the structure of, by J. Parkinson, 622. 



Sparta, excavations at, in 1906, by E. C. 

 Bosanquet, 692. 



Specie reserve of the United Kingdom, 

 the, by R. H. Inglis Palgrave, 643. 



*Spectroscopic observations of solar 

 eclipses, by Prof. F. \V. Dyson, 491. 



Speeton ammonites, C. G. Danford on 

 the, 560. 



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

 chemical and electrical changes in- 

 duced by ultra-violet light, 504. 



