INDEX II. 



267 



•Bristol, S. Evans on the tamiing of sole- 

 leather in, 209. 



, L. Bruton on the trade and com- 

 merce of the city and port of, 207. 

 F. Ashmead on the drainage of 



the city and county of, 240. 



coalfield, the northern end of the, 



H. Cossham, E. Wethered, and W. 

 Saise on, 64. 



■ joint station, F. Fox on the, 248. 



port and Channel dock at Avon- 

 mouth, near Bristol, J. Brunlees on 

 the, 244. 



•Brixham Cavern, W. Pengelly on a 

 recent notice of, 177. 



Brodie (Rev. J.) on the action of ice in 

 what is usually termed the glacial 

 period, 63. 



(Rev. P. B.) on the further exten- 

 sion of the Rhsetic or Penarth beds 

 in Warwickshire, Liecestershire, Not- 

 tinghamshire, Yorkshire, and Cum- 

 bei-land ; and on the occui-rence of 

 some supposed remains of a new La- 

 byrinthodon and a new Radiate there- 

 in, 64. 



Brown (Dr. J. C. ) on the physical geo- 

 graphy of South Africa, and products 

 and prospects of the Cape of Good 

 Hope, 189 ; on the late inimdations in 

 France, 189; on South-African tor- 

 rential floods, 190. 



Bro^vTie (W. R.) on Roberts's patent 

 communicator for railway trains, 24-'l 



Brunlees (J.) on the Bristol port and 

 Channel dock at Avonmouth, near 

 Bristol, 244. 



Bruton (L.) on the trade and commerce 

 of the city and port of Bristol, 207. 



Buckland (Miss A. W.) on rhabdomancy 

 and belomancj', 170. 



Building Societies' Act, 1874, E. W. 

 Brabrook on the working of the, 206. 



societies and the Act of 1874, 



T.F. Peacock on, 218. 



Burt (Rev. J. T.) on the principles of 

 penal legislation, 207. 



Buruts, the Kirghiz or, R. Michell on 

 the supposed lost language and anti- 

 quity of, 176. 



•Calculus of motors, Prof. J. D. Everett 

 on the, 11. 



Cambrian and Silurian rocks, H. Hicks 

 on some areas where the, occur as 

 conformable series, (iO. 



Cannington-Park limestone, E. B. Taw- 

 ney on the age of the, and its relation 

 to coal-mea.«ures south of the Men- 

 dips, 82. 



Cape of Good Hope, Dr. J. C. Brown on 

 the products and prospects of the, 189. 



•Capital and money, W. Westgarth on 

 the science of, 220. 



•Carbon bisulphide in coal-gas, A. V. 

 Harcourt on an apparatus for estima- 

 ting, 43. 



•Carbonic acid in air, A. S. Davis on a 

 simple method of determining the 

 proportion of, 40. 



Carboniferous encrinites from Clifton 

 and from Lancashire, J. G. Grenfell 

 on, 6o. 



Carpenter (Dr. P. P.) on the primary 

 divisions of the Chitonidee, 16l. 



♦ (Dr. W. B.) on the origin of the 



red clay found by the ' Challenger ' at 

 great depths in the ocean, 64 ; *on 

 the condition of the sea-bottom of the 

 North Pacific, as shown by the soimd- 

 ings recently taken by the U.S. steam- 

 ship ' Tuscarora,' 64 ; *on the nervous 

 and generative systems of the Crinoi- 

 dea, 161 ; *on the bearings of recent 

 observations on the doctrine of oceanic 

 circulation, 190. 



• (Miss) on industrial schools, 209. 



•Carrington (Col. H. B.) on the Indians 

 of the North-western United States, 

 171 ; *onDacotah, North-west Ameri- 

 ca, 190 ; *on chrome steel, 245. 



Castracane, Count Abbot, Prof. E. Hull 

 on the discovery of Diatomaceae in 

 coal from Lancashire and other places, 

 by, 74. 



Cayley (Prof.) on the analytical forms 

 called factions, 10. 



Cefn Cave, D. Mackintosh on the origin 

 of two polished and sharpened stones 

 from, 75. 



Chamberlain (H.) on the rise and pro- 

 gress of the sugar trade in Bristol, 

 1875, 209. 



(H. T.), some account of the 



manufacture and refining of sugar in 

 Bristol, 1875, 39. 



Channel tunnel, W. Topley on the, 

 253. 



Chemical Section, Address by A. G. V. 

 Harcom-t to the, 32. 



theory of gunpowder. Dr. Debus on 



the, 40. 



Chessboard, contributions to the mathe- 

 matics of the, by H. M. Taylor, 21. 



•China, Western, Col. Yule on traide- 

 routes to, 197. 



•Chinodine and pyridine bases, further 

 researches, by Prof. Dewar and Dr. 

 M'Kendrick, on the physiological 

 action of the. 165. 



20* 



