INDEX. 



■ 5.111 



Watts (Prof. W. W.) on the igneous and 



associated rocks of the ' Glensaul and 

 Lough Nufooey areas, cos. Mayo and 

 Gal way, 101. 



on the excavation of critical sections 



in the palaeozoic rocks of Wales and the 

 West of England, 111. 



on the preparation of a list of 



characteristic fossils, 118. 

 Waxweiler (Prof. E.), how do wages 



vary ? 458. 

 some methodological remarks on 



totemism, 507. 

 Wealden ostracoda, by F. Ross Thomson, 



393. 

 Webb (W. M.), the protection of plants, 



750. 

 Webstek (Prof. Hutton) on the origin of 



rest days, 500. 

 on the relations between totemic 



clans and secret societies, 506. 

 ♦Wegscheider (Prof. R.), the influence 



of substituents on reaction velocities, 



358. 

 Weiss (Prof. F. E.) on the feeding habits 



of British birds, 128. 



on the structure of fossil plants, 176. 



— on the registration of botanical 



photographs, 177. 

 — Address to the Botanical Section, 



550. 

 Welldon (Rt. Rev. J. E. C), Address 



to the Educational Section, 609. 

 *West (W.) on the flora of Shetland, 



with some reference to its ecology, 586. 

 West African fungi, an investigation of 



some, by A. E. Lechinere, 573. 

 Wheaten flour, some points concerning 



the treatment of, by A. E. Humphries, 



365. 

 Whitaker (W.) on the work of the Cor- 

 responding Societies Committee, 741. 

 WHITE (Dr. Jessie), examinations and 



inspections, 624. 

 * Wholemeal and white flour, nutritive 



values of, by Miss May Yates, 54."). 

 Williams (G. J.) on the excavation of 



critical sections in the paleeozoic rocks 



of Wales and the West of England, 



111. 

 Wilson (Prof. Ernest), the electrical 



conductivity of light aluminium alloys, 



480. 

 Wilson (Prof. James), the inheritance 



of milk-yield in cattle, 607. 

 Wlmperis (H. E.) on gaseous explosions, 



130. 

 ♦Wireless telegraphy, portable equipment 



for, by Oapt. H. R. Sankey, 484. 



Wood (T. B.) and H. W. Hakyey, 

 a method of determining the baking 

 strength of single ears of wheat, 597. 



Woodhead (Dr. T. W.) on the registration 

 of botanical photographs, 177. 



Woodland (W. N. F.) on the systematic 

 position of th • marsipobranchii, 422. 



on the renal organs and some other 



features of the internal anatomy of 

 squilla, 430. 



on the physiology of gas production 



in connection with the gas bladders 



of teleostean fish, 546. 

 Woodward (Dr. A. Smith) on the pre- 

 paration of a list of characteristic 



fossils, 118. 

 on the mammalian fauna in the 



Miocene deposits of the Bugti Hills, 



Baluchistan, 127. 

 Woodward (Dr. H.) on the compilation 



of an index generum et specierum 



animalium, 120. 

 *Worthington (J. H.) on the recent 



eclipse, 343. 

 Wright (W. B.) on the lower carbon- 

 iferous strata of the Bundoran district 



in South Donegal, 387. 

 — : — on the occurrence of submerged 



forests in certain lakes in Donegal and 



the Western Isles of Scotland, 388. 

 Wynne (Prof. W. P.) on the study of 



isomorphous sulphonic derivatives of 



benzene, 82. 

 on the influence of carbon and other 



elements on the corrosion of steel, 83. 



Yapp (Prof. R. H.) on the registration 

 of botanical photographs, 177. 



■ the causes of the formation of hairs 



and palisade cells in certain plants, 565. 



♦Yates (Miss May), nutritive values of 

 wholemeal and white flour, 545. 



Yorkshire, East, the stature, &c, of our 

 ancestors in, by the late J. R. Mortimer. 

 508. 



Young (Prof. Sydney) on dynamic iso- 

 merism, 91. 



Zoological Section, Address by Prof. 

 D'Arcy W. Thompson to the, 395. 



Zoological station at Naples, report on the 

 occupation of a table at the, 119. 



Zoology of the Sandwich Islands, twenty- 

 first report on the, 128. 



Zoology organisation, report on, 127. 



Zuntz (Prof. N.), ventilation in confined 

 quarters, 543. 



