INDEX. 



825 



♦Tetanus, the mechanism of the locked 

 jaw of, Prof. Shenington and Dr. 

 Eoaf on, 723. 



Thane (Prof. G. D.) 07i anthrojyometrio 

 investigation in the British Isles, 349. 



Thomas" (E. N.) and A. G. Tanslet, 

 the phylogenetic value of the vascular 

 structure of spermophytic hypocotyls, 

 761. 



Thompson (Prof. S. P.) on2>raetical elec- 

 trical standards, 104. 



Thomson (Prof. J. A.) on his occupation 

 of the table at the zoological station at 

 Miples, 329. 



Thomson (Prof. J. J.) on practical 

 electrical standards, 104. 



♦Thomson (John), geographical pho- 

 tography, 623. 



TiLDEN .(Prof. A. W.) on the polymeri- 

 sation of isoprene, 525. 



the latex of Di/era costulata, 525. 



TOCHEE (J. F.) on anthropometric inves- 

 tigation in the British Isles, 349. 



ToBDAY (E.) and T. A. Joyce on the 

 ethnography of the Ba-Yaka, 688. 



Torres Straits islanders, the astronomy 

 of the, by Dr. W. H. R. Eivers, 701. 



Transltei, the, viagnetic observations in, 

 by Prof. J. C. Beattic, 132. 



*Transvaal, the fossil flora of the, report 

 on, 669. 



Tremors, the effects of, on astronomical 

 observations. Prof. H. H. Turner on, 

 490. 



*Tkevoe-Battye (A.), the Zambezi be- 

 yond the Falls, 628. 



Trias, the origin of the, discussion on, 

 574. 



Trias of the British Isles, fourth report 

 on the fauna and flora of the, 293. 



footprints from the, report on : 



Part IV., by H. C. Beasley, 299. 



Tube-building worms, the habits of, by 

 A. T, Watson, 599. 



TUENBULL (R. E.), labourers and the 

 land : Yorkshire, 654. 



Tubner (Dr. Daw.son), the electrical 

 resistance of the tissues, 723, 



Turneb (Prof. H. H.) on seismological 

 investigatio7is, 92. 



on the effects of tremors on astro- 

 nomical observations, 490. 



and Prof. A. Schuster on the 



rainfall periodogram, 498. 



Ultra-violet light, chemical and elec- 

 trical changes induced by, by Sir W. 

 Ramsay and Dr. J. F. Spencer, 504. 



Unemployed, the, by C. J. Hamilton, 651. 



Unemployed problem, the, and labour 

 exchanges, by W. H. Beveridge, 652. 



United States, irrigation in the, by J. H. 

 Beacom, 617. 



Usk and Wye valleys, the glaciation of 

 the, Rev. W. L. Carter on, 579. 



Ussher (W. A. E.) on the fauna, and 

 flora of the Trias of the British Isles, 

 "293. 



Vaughan (Dr. A.) on researches on the 

 faunal sticcession in the carboniferous 

 limestone of the South-west of England, 

 292. 



on life-zones in the British car- 

 boniferous rocks, 302. 



♦Vectors, the notation and use of, by 

 Prof. O. Henrici, 482. 



by Prof. G. G. Knott, 482. 



Vegetation of Teneriffe, the, by Hugh 

 Richardson, 739. 



♦Vesuvius, recent observations at, by Dr. 

 H, J. Johnston-Lavis, 579. 



Vincent (Prof. Swale) on tlie ductless 

 glands, 423. 



Vines (Prof. S. H.) on the occupation 

 of a table at the mariiie biological 

 laboratory, Plymouth, 325. 



♦Wage-earners of school age, the educa- 

 tion of, by Mrs. M. E. Macdonald, 778. 



Wager (Harold) on studies most suitable 

 for elementary schools, 438. 



Walker (Norman), the algal vegetation 

 of ponds, 758. 



Wallis (B. White) on the conditions of 

 health essential to the carrying on of 

 the work of instruction in schools, 433. 



Walsingham (Lord) on tlie comjnlation 

 of a7i index generum- et specierum 

 animalium, 314. 



Walter (Miss Edna) on studies most 

 suitable for elementary schools, 438. 



Water, the temperature at which it 

 freezes in sealed tubes. Prof. H. A. 

 Miers and Miss F. Isaac on, 522. 



♦Waterproof roads as a solution of the 

 dust problem, by D. Mackenzie, 674. 



Wateeston (Dr.) on anthropometric in- 

 vestigation in the British Isles, 349. 



Watson (Arnold T.), the habits of tube- 

 building worms, 599. 



Watson (Dr. W.) 07i the investigation 

 of the upper atmosphere by means of 

 kites, 138. 



Watts (Dr. Marshall) on wave-length 

 tables of the spectra of the elements and 

 compounds, 161. 



Watts (Prof. W. W.) on the work of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 45. 



071 Br. A , Vaughan' s researches on 



faunal succession in the carboniferous 

 limestone in tlie South-west of England, 

 292. 



on the fauna and flora of the Trias 



of the British Isles, 293. 



