INDEX. 



TO-" 



RuOSBB (Sir Arthur W.) on magnetic 

 observations at Falmouth Observatory, 78. 



on practical electrical standards, 80. 



Rudler (F. W.) on the work of the Cor- 

 responding Societies Committee, 741. 



Ruhemann (Dr. S.) on the transformation 

 of aromatic nitroamines and allied sub- 

 stances, and its relation to substitution 

 in benzene derivatives, 94. 



Kuwenzori, the height of, by (.'apt. E. O. 

 Henrici, 444. 



Sacculina, the effect of, upon the fat- 

 metabolism of the crab Inachus 

 mau/ritanicus, by <>. 0. Robson, 415. 



SADLBB (Prof. M. E.) on changes in 

 regulations affecting secondary educa- 

 tion, 2.'U. 



Saleeby (Dr. C. W.)> eugenics and edu- 

 cation : the problem of the feeble- 

 minded child, 628. 



Sampson (Prof. R. A.) on seismological 

 investigations, 30. 



Sand (Dr. H. J. S.) on electroanalysis, 98. 



Sand dunes, advancing, a fifteen-year 

 study of, by Prof. H. C. Cowles, 565. 



Sandwich Islands, the zoology of the. 

 twenty-first report on, 128. 



Sankey (Capt. H. R.) on gaseous ex- 

 plosions, 130. 



* portable equipment for wireless 



telegraphy, 484. 



and W. Pollard Dibgy on human 



susceptibility to vibration, 480. 

 Sarscn or greywether, a remarkable, by 



Rev. Dr. Irving, 392. 

 Sciiafer (Prof. E. A.) on the ductless 



glands, 172. 

 Scharff (Dr.) 071 the formulation of a 



definite system on which collectors should 



record their captures, 126. 



on the survey of Clare Island, 176. 



Schmidt (Dr. J.), five years' Danish 



investigations on the biology of the 



eel, 409. 

 School-books and eyesight, by G. F. 



Daniell. 633. 

 Schrotek (Prof. C), the Swiss National 



Park and its flora, 563. 

 Schuster (Prof. A.) on establishing a 



solar observatory in Australia, 25. 

 on the investigation of the upper 



atmosphere, 27. 



on seismological investigations, 30. 



on magnetic observations at Falmouth 



Observatory, 78. 



on practical electrical standards, 80. 



♦Science, suggested reforms in the teach- 

 ing of, by P. Shaw Joffery, 633. 



Scientific misappropriation of popular 

 terms, the, Prof. J. W. Gregory on, 742. 



SCLATHB (Dr. P. L.) on the compilation of 

 an index generum et specierum anima- 

 lium, 120. 



on the zoology of the Sandwich 



Islands, 128. 



Scott (Dr. D. H.) on the structure of fossil 

 plants, 176. 



ft palaeozoic fern and its relation- 

 ships (Zygopteris Grayi, Williamson), 

 568. 



*Scott (E. Kilburn), the manufacture of 



nitrogen compounds by electric power, 



488. 

 Screw propellers, electric drives for, II. A. 



Mavor on, 477. 

 Secondary education, changes in regulations 



affecting, report on, 234. 

 — ■ — ■ and that of universities and. other 



places of higher education, the overlapping 



between, report on, 216. 

 Sedgwick (Prof. A.) on the occupation of 



a table at the zoological station at Naples, 



119. 

 on zoology organisation, 127. 



ok the occupation of a table at the 



marine laboratory, Plymouth, 129. 



Seismological investigations, sixteenth re- 

 port on, 30. 



Seligmann (Dr. C. S.) on the preparation 

 of a new edition of ' Notes and, Queries in 

 Anthropology,'' 140. 



the divine kings of the Shilluk, 513. 



Sensitiveness of indicators, the, by II. T. 

 Tizard, 268. 



Seward (Prof. A. C.) on the structure. 

 of fossil plants, 176. 



-a petrified Jurassic plant from York- 

 shire, 570. 



links with the past in the plant 



world, 647. 



Sex, some recent work on, by Geoffrev 



Smith, 414. 

 Sex determination in Dinophilus gyro- 



ciliatus, the problem of, by C. Shearer, 



416. 

 Sharp (D.) on the zoology of the Sandwich 



Islands, 128. 

 Shaw (Dr. W. N.) on the investigation of 



the upper atmosphere, 27. 

 on magnetic observations at Falmouth 



Observatory, 78. 

 — on practical electrical standards, 



80. 

 — — the thunderstorms of July 28 and 29, 



1911, 331. 

 * -a theodolite for observing balloons, 



345. 

 * some models representing air- 



1 ■urrents up to a height of nine kilo- 



motres, 345. 

 Shaw (Mrs. W. N.) on the curricula and 



educational organisation of industrial 



and poor law schools, 214. 



