264^ 



REPORT 1872. 



Fellowes (Frank P.), suggestions for im- 

 proving and extending our national 

 accounts^ 224. 

 *Fernieutatiou of sewage, W. J. Cooper 

 on a proposed method of preventing 

 the, 73. 



Fichtelite, Prof Mallet on the occur- 

 rence in recent pine-timber of, a hy- 



. drocarbon hitherto only known in a 

 fossil state, 79. 



Filter-pump, T. E. Thorpe on au im- 

 proved form of, 83, 



Fishes and Crustacea, M. G. Pouchet on 

 the mechanism of the change of colour 

 in, 152. 



Flora of Moab, A. W. Hayne on the, 128. 



of Sussex, W. B. Hemsley on a 



summary analysis of the, 128. 



Flower (Prof W. H.) on the arrange- 

 ment and nomenclatm-e of the lobes 

 of the liver in Mammalia, 150. 



*Focal lines, Prof. Everett on, 36. 



Fonvielle (W. de) on the advantages of 

 keeping records of physical phenomena 

 connected with thunder-storms, 55. 



Forbes (George) on astronomical re- 

 fraction, 3G. 



Forests in India, Dr. Brandis on the geo- 

 gr.aphical distribution of, 205. 



, G. Lemoiue on the relation of, to 



hydrology, 210. 



Fossil animals, Prof A. Gaudry on the, 

 from Mount Leberon (Vaucluse), 102. 



chip, Prof Nicholson on a silici- 



fied forest in the Pocky Mountains, 

 with an account of a supposed, 192. 



Fossiliferous strata. Prof. Dickson on 

 Stif/marice from the, at Axichentorlie, 

 127. 



Foster (P. Le Neve, jun.), description 

 of the new branch canal leading from 

 the Canal Cavour for irrigating the 

 province of Lomellina, 243. 



Fox, Colonel A. Lane, Address to the 

 Department of Anthropology, 157. 



French and English peoples. Dr. T. 

 Nicholas on the etlinological affi- 

 nities of the, 191. 



Fresh- and brackish-water formations, 

 R. A. C. Godwin-Austen on the place 

 of the, in the geological scale, 90. 



*Friction, Prof Croullebois on tubes 

 phosphorescent by, 36. 



Froude (W.) on an apparatus for auto- 

 matically recording the rolling of a 

 ship in a seaway, 243. 



Fungus life. Dr. Crace-Calvert on the 

 relative power of various substances 

 in preventing putrefaction, and the 

 development of protoplasmic and, 69. 



Gaffield (Thomas) on the action of sun- 

 light on colourless and coloured glass, 

 37. 

 Galletly (John) on the ignition of cotton 

 by saturation with fatty oils, 73. 



Gal ton (Francis), Address to the Geo- 

 graphical Section, 198. 



Galvanic battery, the Pev. H. Highton 

 on a powerful, 77. 



Gamble (John G.) on the Brighton in- 

 tercepting and outfall sewers, 245. 



Gamma-function, J. W. L. Glaisher on 

 the function that stands in the same 

 relation to Bernoulli's numbers that 

 the, does to factorials, 17. 



Garrod (A. H.) on pulse-rate and the 

 forces which vaiy it, 151. 



Gaseous, the liquid, and the solid states 

 of matter, Prof J. Thomson on rela- 

 tions between the, 24. 



Gaudry (Prof A.) on the fossil animals 

 of Mount Leberon (Vaucluse), 102. 



Geographical Section, Francis Galton's 

 Address to the, 198. 



Geography, political and physical, the 

 Rev. E. Hale on the place of, in edu- 

 cation, 209. 



, scientific. General Strachey on the 



scope of, illustrated by remarks on the 

 climate of India, 214. 



Geological Section, R. A. C. Godwin- 

 Austen's Addi-ess to the, 90. 



Gervais (Paul) sur les dents du Macrau- 

 chenia, et leur mode de remplacement, 

 136. 



Gibb (Sir D., Bart.) on a pata-patoo from 

 New Zealand, 185 ; on stone imple- 

 ments and fragments of pottery from 

 Canada, 186. 



Girls, Lydia E. Becker on statistics re- 

 garding the attendance and education 

 of, in the elementary schools of Man- 

 chester, 220. 



Ciladstone (George) on the dust thrown 

 up by Vesuvius during the late erup- 

 tion, 74. 



• (Dr. J. H.), Address by, to the 



Chemical Section, 64 ; on filiform 

 native silver, 75. 



and Alfred Tribe on the mutual 



helpfulness of chemical affinity, heat, 

 and electricity in producing the de- 

 composition of water, 75. 

 Glaisher (J. W. L.) on the evaluation in 

 series of certain definite integi-als, 15 ; 

 on the function that stands in the 

 same relation to Bernoulli's numbers 

 that the gamma-function does to 

 factorials, 17 ; on the law of distribu- 

 tion of prime numbers, 19. 



