244. 
jute-plant, and its use as a textile 
material, 63. 
Hooker (Dr.),!Address by, to the Depart- 
ment of Botany and Zoology, 102. 
*Hugeins (W.) on the spectrum of Cog- 
gia’s comet, 20. 
Hull (Prof. E.), Address by, to the Geo- 
logical Section, 67 ; on the progress of 
the geological survey of Ireland, 85. 
*Human periorbital bones, Prof. Mac- 
alister on some anomalous forms of 
the, 143. 
Hume (Rey. Canon) on the origin and 
characteristics of the people in the 
counties of Down and Antrim, 153. 
Hutchinson (T. J.) on the anthropology 
of prehistoric Peru, 154 ; on the com- 
mercial, industrial, and natural re- 
sources of Peru, 177. 
Huxley (Prof.) on the development of 
the columella auris in the Amphibia, 
141. 
', *Hydrates, a new class of, Prof. F, 
Guthrie on, 22. 
Hygiene, Dr. R. Caton on the teaching 
of, in Government schools, 198. 
Hypochlorous acid, chlorine, &c., and 
peroxide of hydrogen, T. Fairley on, 
57. 
*Iguanodon, W. W. Hawkins on a pair 
of symmetrical bones present with the 
fossil remains of, 141. 
*Insolvency in life-insurance companies, 
T. B. Sprague on the causes of, and 
the best means of detecting, exposing, 
and preventing it, 211. 
International Congress of Geographical 
Sciences, C. Maunoir on the, 184. 
Ireland, Rev. Dr. Grainger on the fossils 
of the posttertiary deposits of, 73. 
, E. T. Hardman on some new lo- 
calities for the upper boulder-clay in, 
76. 
*—, sketch of the geology of the N.E. 
of, by Prof. Harkness, 83. 
, Prof. Hull on the progress of the 
geological survey of, 83. 
, 5. A. Stewart on the mosses of 
the north-east of, 184. 
, a2 glimpse of prehistoric times in 
the north of, by W. J. Knowles, 
155. 
, surveys in, a communication from 
the Ordnance Department, 184. 
Trish crannogs and their contents, W. 
F. Wakeman on, 159. 
Trregularities, certain protracted, of at- 
mospheric pressure in the Indian mon- 
soon region, and their relation to. 
REPORT—1874., 
variations of the local’ rainfall, H. F. 
Blanford on, 36. 
*Isometrical drawing, G. Fawcus on a 
new method of, 222. 
Jeffreys (J. Gwyn) on the so-called crag 
of Bridlington, 83. 
Jellett (Rev. Prof.), Address by, to the 
Mathematical and Physical Section, 1. 
*Jones (Sir W., Bart.) on cavern ex- 
ploration, by M. Emilion Frossard, in 
the Vallée de Campan, Hautes-Py- 
rénées, France, 88. 
Jordan, the, Rev. J. L. Porter on a 
recent journey east of, 179. 
Jute-plant, Prof. Hodges on the compo- 
sition of the fibre of the, and its use 
as a textile material, 63. 
Khasi Hill tribes, Major H. H. Godwin- 
Austen on the rude stone monuments 
of the, 153. 
Khiva, J. A. MacGahan on the Russian 
expedition to, 183. 
*Kinahan (G. H.) on geological maps 
and sections of West Galway and 
South-west Mayo, 88. 
Kinematical analogues, Prof. Everett on 
statical and, 11. “ 
Karchhoff’s rules for electric circuits, 
Prof. J. C. Maxwell on the application 
of, to the solution of a geometrical 
problem, 18. 
Knowles (W.J.), a glimpse of prehistorie 
times in the north of lreland, 155, 
*Ladd (W.) on the construction of large 
Nicol’s prisms, 26. 
Land, wrongly called property, Sir G. 
Campbell on the privileges over, 195. 
Langtry (G.) on the occurrence of the 
Middle Lias at Ballycastle, 88. 
*Lankester (E. Ray) on English nomen-~ 
clature in systematic biology, 137 ; 
*on the genealogical import of the 
internal shell of Mollusca, 137; *on 
the development of the eye of the 
Cephalopoda, 142. 
*Latent heat of gases, J. Dewar on the, 
22. 
*——.—— of liquefied gases, Dr. Dewar 
on the, 57. 
*Lawson (Prof.) on structural peculiari- 
ties of the Ampelidee, 134. 
Leaf-arrangement, note by Dr. H. Airy 
on variation of, 128. 
Leaf-wearing tribe on the western coast 
of India, M. J. Walhouse on a, 159. 
*Letts (Dr. EE. A.) 
Brown on methyl-thetine, 56. 
and Prof. Crum 
~ ae 
