INDEX. 



770 



Balfour (H.) on tht lake villages in the 

 neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 134. 



— ■ — on Ihc age of .stone circles, 141. 



♦Ball (Dr. John) and J. I. Craig, the 

 use of diagrams in the classification of 

 climates. 348. 



Barbeau (C. M.), the bearing of the 

 heraldry of the Indians of the N.W. 

 coast of America upon (heir social 

 organisation, 519. 



Barcroft (J.) on the dissociation of oxy- 

 ha inogiobin at high altitudi s, 1 •">:>. 



♦Barger (Dr. George), colloids in phar- 

 macology, 367. 



the adsorption of iodine by the 



glucoside saponarin, 367. 



Barker (B. T. P.) and V. Florian 

 Htllier, cider-sickness. 596. 



Barrtngton (R. M.) on the biological 

 problems incidental to the Belmullei 

 whaling station 121. 



Barus (Prof. Carl), the diffusion of gases 

 through water, 357. 



♦Bvteman (H.). the infinitesimal trans- 

 formation of an electromagnetic field 

 into itself, 322. 



— ■ — a theorem connected with six lines 

 in space, 32(5. 



Bateson (Prof.) on the experimental 

 stud)/ of heredity, 176. 



Address to the Agricultural Sub- 

 section, 587. 



Bather (Dr. F. A.) on the compilation of 

 an index generum el specierurn anima- 

 Hum, 120.' 



Beaumont (W. Worby), the origin and 

 production of corrugation of tramway 

 rails, 475. 



Beet-sugar industry, a British, economic 

 aspects of the introduction and estab- 

 lishment of, by Sigmund Stein, 462. 



Beilby (Dr. G. T.) on electroanalysis, 98. 



lull. Sir Charles, tht claim of,. to the 

 discovery of motor and sensor// nervt - 

 channels. Dr. A. D. Waller on, 287. 



Hdin idle! whaling station, the biological 

 problems incidental to the. report on. 121. 



Benson (Miss M. J.), the structure of a 

 new type of synangium from the 

 caleiferous sandstone beds of Pettycur. 

 Fife, and its bearing on the origin 

 of the seed, 568. 



Berridge (D.) on the overlapping hi! in i n 

 secondary education and that of univer- 

 sities, tt-e.. 216. 



Berrimax (A. E.) on the principles of 

 flight, 481.. 



Bessel and other functions, the further 

 tabulation of. report on. 67. 



Bevan (Rev. J. O.) on the work of tin 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 741. 



BEVAN (Prof. P. V.), anomalous disper- 

 sion and solar phenomena, 347. 



Bevan (Prof. P. V.), absorption spectra 



and refractive power of metallic va- 

 pours, 300. 



Bickerdike (('. F.). taxation of land 

 values, 45S. 



Bidder ((i. P.) on, the occupation of a 

 table at th- zoological station at Naples, 

 119. 



Biles (Prof. J. H.), Address to the 

 Engineering Section, 469. 



Bishop (Major ('. F.) on a brypansome 

 found in a sheep tick, and its probable 

 connection with louping-ill, 418. 



Bishop's Stortford, a prehistoric site ni. 

 report on the excavation of, 131. 



— ■ — later finds of horse and other pre- 

 historic remains at. by Dr. A. Irving, 

 521. 



prehistoric horse, the, further notes 



on, by Dr. A. Irving. 521. 



Blackbird, the adolescent, the vernal- 

 plumage changes in, and their correla- 

 tion with sexual maturity, by Dr. ('. .1. 

 Patten, 404. 



Blood-vessels and blood-cells, certain 

 physical questions regarding, by Dr. 

 John Tait, 544. 



Blumfeld (Dr.) on anaesthetics, 154. 



Body metabolism in cancer, interim report 

 on, 171. 



Bolton (H.) on the fossil flora and fa nun 

 of the Midland coalfields, 105. 



Bone (Prof. W. A.) on gaseous explosions, 

 130. 



BoNNEY (Prof. T. CI.) on the erratic 

 blocks of the British Isles, 101. 



on tin work of the Corresponding 



Societies Committee, 741. 



Botanical photographs, the registration of, 

 report on, 177. 



Botanical Section. Address by Prof. 

 F. E. Weiss to- the. 550. 



BOTHAMLEY (C. H.) 0)1 the oveiia ppin I 

 between secondary education and that 

 of universities, etc. 216. 



Bottomley (Dr. J. T.) on practical 

 electrical standards, 80. 



Bottomley (Prof. \Y. B.). the structure 

 and function of the root-nodules of 

 Myrica Gale, 5S4. 



some effects of bacteriotoxins on 



the germination and growth of plants. 

 584.' 



the fixation of nitrogen by free- 

 living soil bacteria, 607. 



some effects of bacteriotoxins on 



soil organisms. 608. 



♦Boulbnghr (C. L.), variation in a 

 medusa. 413. 



Boilton (Prof. \V. S.) on the pn partition 

 of a list of characteristic fossils, 118. 



Bourne (Prof. G. C.) on toologg organisa- 

 tion, 127. 



