INDEX. 



l^Aii oMeHslt (*) svjnifieB that no ahstract of the communication is given."] 



^EJECTS and rules of the Association, 



XXV. 



Places and times of meeting, with names 

 of officers from commencement, xxxii. 



List of former Presidents and Secretaries 

 of the Sections, xxxix. 



List of evening lectures, lii. 



Lectures to tlie Operative Classes, liv. 



■Officers of Sectional Committees present 

 at York, Iv. 



Treasurer's account, Ivii. 



Table showing the attendance and re- 

 ceipts at the annual meetings, Iviii. 



•Officers and Council for 1881-82, Ix. 



Jleport of the Council to the General 

 Committee at York, Ixi. 



Jlecommendations adopted by tlie General 

 Committee at York : — Involving grants 

 of money, Ixiii ; not involving grants 

 of money, Ixvi ; communications or- 

 dered to l-e printed in exteuiso, Ixviii ; 

 resolutions referred to the Council for 

 consideration, Ixix. 



■Synopsis of grants of money appropriated 

 to scientific purposes, Ixx. 



Places of meeting for 1882 and 1883, Ixxi. 



■General statement of sums which have 

 been paid on account of grants for 

 scientific purposes, Ixxii. 



■General meetings, Ixxxii. 



Address by the President, Sir John 

 Lubbock, Bart., M.P., F.E.S., D.C.L., 

 LL.D., Pres. L.S., 1. 



Abel (Mr.) on patent legislation, 222. 



Abney (Capt.) on an investigation for 

 the purpose of fixing a standard of 

 white light, 126 ; on the present state 

 of our knowledge of spectrum analy- j 

 sis, 317 ; on hydrocarbons in the solar i 

 atmosphere, 524 ; on the effect of the 

 spectrum of silver chloride, 694. | 



-Acetabulum of animals in which the ! 

 ligamentum teres is described as j 

 wanting. Prof. Struthers on the, 720. ! 



Actinium, the new element, Dr. T. L. I 

 Phipson on, 603. | 



Adams (Prof. A. Leith) on the explora- 

 tion of the caves of the South of Ire- 

 land, 218. 



Adams (Prof. W. G.) on an investigation 

 for the purpose of fixing a standard of 

 white light, 126; on standards for use 

 in electrical measurements, 423 ; on 

 magnetic disturbances and earth- 

 currents, 463. 



Africa, comparative sketch of what was 

 known in, in 1830 with what is known 

 in 1881, by Lieut.-Col. J. A. Grant, 746. 



, some results of fifty years' ex- 

 ploration in, by Rev. H. Waller, 746. 



* , the gold mines of the West Coast 



of, a recent visit to, Commander 

 Cameron on, 747. 



Agricultural statistics and prospects, by 

 W. Botly, 750. 



*Agriculture, the depression in ; its effects 

 and its lessons, by H. F. Moore, 761. 



Alexander (Lieut. -Gen. Sir J. E.) on the 

 improvement of fresliwater fisheries, 

 680. 



Algebra of logic, a contribution to the 

 history of, by Rev. R. Harley, 559. 



Allen (A. H.) on the separation of hydro- 

 carbon oils from fat oils, 589. 



Allen (Edward) on a remarkable human 

 skull found near York, 704. 



Allman (Prof.) on the Scottish zoological 

 station, 177 ; on the occupation of a 

 table at the zoological station at 

 Naples, 178. 



Ambresbury Banks, on excavations in 

 a camp called, in Epping Forest, by 

 Major-Gen. Pitt-Rivers, 697. 



Anatomy and Physiologj', Address by 

 Prof. J. S. Buidon Sanderson to the 

 Department of, 705. 



Ancient dwellings, account of the dis- 

 covery of six, found under and near 

 to British barrows on the Yorkshire 

 wolds, by J. R. Mortimer, 691. 



Anderson (Dr. T.) on a prismatic opto- 

 meter, 521. 



Anemometer, a new integrating, Rev. 

 J. M. Wilson and H. S. H. Shaw on, 543. 



