INDEX. 
Colour physiology of the higher erustacea, 
interim report on the, 187. 
Coloured labourer, the, in the Transvaal, 
the life-history of, by Dr. L. G. Irvine 
and D. Macaulay, 555. 
Convergent evolution, as illustrated by 
the Litopterna, a group of fossil ungu- 
lata in Patagonia, by Prof. W. B. Scott, 
443. 
COOPER (Miss A. J.) on the training of 
teachers, 228. 7 
CooPER (W. F.), G. H. F. Nuttall, and 
R. D. Smedley, the buccal apparatus 
of a tick, 439. . 
COPELAND (Prof.) on meteorological 
observations on Ben Nevis, 77. 
*Copper deposit of Little Namaqualand, 
the, by J. H. Ronaldson, 510. 
Copyright, the law of, as affecting the 
proceedings of scientific societies, by 
W. Morris Colles, 50. 
Corals, the réle of mucus in, by Prof. 
J. E. Duerden, 436. 
{CORBETT (J. H.), education on the 
Veldt, 615. 
+CornIsH (H. Warre), progress of educa- 
tion in the Transvaal since the war, 616. 
CornisH (Dr. Vaughan) on the work of the 
Corresponding Societies Committee, 35. 
Corresponding Societies Committee : 
Report, 35. 
Conference in. London, 37. 
List of Corresponding Socicties, 59. 
Papers published by Corresponding 
Societies, 62. 
Court (Stephen), the progress of Johan- 
nesburg, 479. 
CousENS (R. Lewis) on a radio-active 
substance discovered in the Transvaal, 
372. 
CREAK (Capt. E. W.) on magnetic ohserva- 
tions at Falmouth Observatory, 80. 
—— artificial globes and their place in 
geography, 462. 
Credit: whatis credit? by F. W. Buxton, 
483. 
Crete, archeological and ethnological re- 
searches in, report on, 208. 
— Dr. A. J. Eviens’s excavations at 
Knossos, 209. 
Crick (G. C.) on life-cones in the British 
carboniferous rocks, \71. 
*ORISP (Canon), the mental capacity of 
the Bantu, 530. 
CroGHAN (H. H.), a fuel of the midland 
districts of South Africa, 373. 
CROSSLEY (Dr. A. W.) on the study of 
hydro-aromatic substances, 153. 
CUNNINGHAM (Prof. D. J.) on anthropo- 
metric investigation in the British 
Tsles, 198. 
— on anthropometric investigations 
among the native troops of the Egyptian 
army, 207, 
639 
CUNNINGHAM (Rey. Dr. W.), Address to 
the Section of Economic Science and 
Statistics, 466. 
Daniell pile, a dry, by J. Brown, 340. 
DARWIN (Francis) on the registration of 
botanical photographs, 226. 
DARWIN (Prof. G. H.), Presidential 
Address, 3. 
—— on seismological investigations, 83. 
DARWIN (H.) on seismological investiga- 
tions, 83. 
DARWIN (Major L.) on seismological 
investigations, 83. 
Davis (Prof. W. M.), the sculpture of 
mountains by glaciers, 393. 
the cycle of geographic forms in an 
arid area, 463. 
DAWKINS (Prof. W. Boyd) on the age a 
stone circles, 197. 
—-— on the lake village at Glastonbury, 
210. 
Deep boreholes, an instrument for sur- 
veying, by Dr. F. H. Hatch, 404. 
*Dew (H'sdon), water-power plants, 
507. 
DEWAR (Prof. Sir J.) on wave-length 
tables of the spectra of the elements and 
compounds, 105. 
Diamond pipes and fissures of South 
Africa, the, by H. 8. Harger, 408. 
*Differential invariants of a plane and 
of a curve on a plane, by Prof. A. R. 
Forsyth, 350. 
DINES (W. H.) on the investigation of the 
upper atmosphere by means of kites, 
81. 
Discussions : 
The effect of climate upon health, 
547. 
Stock diseases in South Africa, 549. 
*On educational methods in the teach- 
ing of botany, 586. 
Diseases among natives, by Dr. G. 
Liengme, 556. 
Drivers (Prof. E.) on the study of hydro- 
cromatic substances, 153. 
Dixon (Prof. A. F.) on anthrapometric 
investigation im the British Isles, 198. 
D1xon (H. B.), the propagation of explo- 
sions in gases, 364. 
——— on the atomic weight of chlorive, 
- 365. 
Dolomite formation of the Transvaal, 
the, by C. B. Horwood, 406. : 
Domestic service in England and in 
South Africa, the terms and conditions 
of, by Lady Knightley, 472. ‘ 
DONCASTER (L.), recent work on gameto- 
genesis and its bearing on the theories 
of heredity, 432. 
DoRNAN (Rev. 8. 8.) on the geology of 
Basutoland, 404. 
