652 
THANE (Prof. G. D.) on anthropometric 
investigation in the British Isles, 198. 
THEILER (Dr. A.), the advance of our 
knowledge respecting the stock diseases 
of South Africa, 553. 
Thermal radiation at very low tempera- 
tures, by Dr. J. T. Bottomley, 330. 
Thermodynamics, a restatement of the 
second law of, and its bearing upon 
our views of heat and radiation, by 
Dr. M. Blieden, 344. 
Thermometers, the temperatures of, 
under black cloth and under white 
cloth, Dr. C. Chree on, 347. 
THOMPSON (Prof. 8. P.) on practical elec- 
trical standards, 95. 
THOMSON (Prof. J. J.) on practical 
electrical standards, 95. 
*Thonga tribe, the, by Rey. A. H. Junod, | 
532. 
*Tibet and the Sikhim Himalayas, by 
D. W. Freshfield, 462. 
Tick, the buccal apparatus of a, by 
G. H. F. Nuttall, W. F. Cooper, and 
R. D. Smedley, 439. 
Tichs, South African, habits and peculiari- 
ties of some, by C. P. Lounsbury, 282. 
T1£TZ (Dr. H.) on an important charac- 
teristic of Cape wines, 368. 
*TIPPETT (A. M.), Cape Government 
railways, 504. 
TOCHER (J. F.) on anthropometric inves- 
tigation in the British Tsies, 198. 
{Topographical survey of South Africa, 
some advantages to be gained from a, 
by Col. D. A. Johnston, 459. 
Totemism of the Bantu, the, by E. §S. 
Hartland, 527. 
*]'otemism of the Becwana, Rev. W. C. 
Willoughby on the, 532. 
Training of teachers, interim report on 
the, 228. 
Transvaal], the, the soils of, from their 
chemical aspect, by Herbert Ingle, 
373. 
—— the dolomite formation of, by C. B. | 
Horwood, 406. 
+—— the physical features of, by Tudor | 
G. Trevor, 462. 
t the game preserves of, by Major 
Stevenson Hamilton, 464. 
—— the rise and progress of the pro- 
tection of industrial property in, by 
J. A. Bucknill, 480. 
—— the mineral industry of, some 
statistics of, by A. C. Sutherland, 485. 
the climate and life-zones of, by 
J. Burtt-Davy, 593. 
t—— the prospects of the secondary 
schools in, by C. D. Hope, 616. 
+—— manual instruction in, by T. W. 
Lowden, 615, 
+—— progress of education in, since the 
war, by H. Warre Cornish, 616, 
REPORT—1905. 
Transvaal Geological Survey, the recent 
work of the, by Herbert Kynaston, 
401. 
Treasure trove, the law of, especially in 
relation to local scientific socicties, by 
Dr. Wm. Martin, 44. 
tTREVOR (Tudor G.), the physical 
features of the Transvaal, 462. 
tTriangulation of the Johannesburg 
gold-fields, the, by C. van der Steer, 
462, 
Trias of the British Isles, third report 
on the fuuna and flora of the, 161. 
*Trigonometry, spherical, _ graphic 
methods in, by Prof. G. H. Bryan, 
344. 
TURNER (Hon. G.), rinderpest : 
prevention and cure, 552. 
TURNER (Prof. H. H.) on seismological 
investigations, 83. 
its 
Underground waters of North-West York- 
shire, the movements of, sixth and final 
report on, 170. 
UssHER (W. A. E.) on the fauna and 
Hora of the Trias of the British Isles, 
161. 
{VAN DER STKER (C.), the triangulation 
of the Johannesburg gold fields, 462. 
VAUGHAN (Dr. A.) on lifc-zones in the 
British carboniferous rocks, 171. 
Vegetation and floral elements of tro- 
pical Africa, Prof. A. Engler on the, 
586. 
Vertebrata, the growing point in the, 
Prof. J. Cleland on, 444. 
Vines (Prof. 8. H.) on investigations 
at the marine biological laboratory, 
Plymouth, 183. 
Viscosity of liquid mixtures, the, at the 
temperature of their boiling-points, 
by Dr. A. Findlay, 365. 
WAGER (Harold), Address to the 
Botanical Section, 562. 
WAITE (P. C.) and Dr. A. J. Herbertson, 
a new rainfall map of Africa, 465. 
WALLER (Dr. A. D.), the administration 
of chloroform, 557. 
WarRD (Prof. H. Marshall) on eaperi- 
mental studies in the physiology of 
heredity, 226. 
*Water-power plants, by Elsdon Dew, 
507. 
WATERMEYER (F. §S.), geographical 
notes on Africa south of the Limpopo, 
462. 
WATERSTON (Dr.) on anthropometric in- 
vestigation in the British Isles, 198. 
