270 



REPORT 1875, 



France, the late inundations in, Dr. J. 0. 

 Brown on, 189. 



*Free trade in labour, D. A. Spalding 

 on, 220. 



Froude (W.), Address by, to the Me- 

 chanical Section, 221. 



Fry (E.) on moraines as the retaining 

 walls of lakes, 64. 



Fungus, a rare species of, found in Sur- 

 rey, C. H. S. Perceval on, 158. 



'Gaseous compound of fluorine and 

 phosphorus, a new, Prof. T. E. Thorpe 

 on, 45. 



•Gatehouse (J. W.) on nitrite of silver, 

 43. 



•General integration of Laplace's difter- 

 ential equation of the tides, by Sir W. 

 Thomson, 23. 



Geographical Sectiou,Address by Lieut.- 

 Gen. R. Strachey to the, 180. 



Geological meaning of the term " river- 

 basin," and the desirabiUtv of sub- 

 stituting " drainage-area," D. Mack- 

 intosh on the, 75. 



Section, Address by Dr. T. Wright 



to the, 47. 



structure and flora of the Masca- 



rene Islands, I. B. Balfour on the, 

 157. 



*Geology of New Zealand, Dr. J. Hec- 

 tor on the, 69. 



Geonietriciil theorems, W. Hay den on 

 some, 14. 



Gill (Rev. W. W.) on the origin of the 

 South-Sea Islanders, 173 ; some tra- 

 ditions of the Hervev Islanders, 

 174. 



Glacial period. Dr. C. Ricketts on the 

 cause of tlie, with reference to the 

 British Isles, 79. 



* , Rev. W. S. Symonds on changes 



of climate during the, 82. 



Gladstone (Dr. J. H.) on the relation of 

 the arrangement of the aeids and 

 bases in a mixture of salts to the ori- 

 ginal manner of combination, 43 ; 

 on the recent discovery of a stone im- 

 plement in the brick-earth of Erith, 

 175. 



and A. Tribe on the action of 



the copper-zinc couple, 43 ; on the 

 augmentation of the chemical acti- 

 vity of aluminium by contact with 

 a more negative metal, 43. 



Glaisher (J. W. L.) on the formulie 

 of verification in partitions, 1 1 ; on 

 theorems on the wth roots of unity, 13. 



*Glass, toughened, J. D. Cogan on, 245. 



Gold and tin of the ancients, C. O. 



Groom-Napier on the localities from 

 whence the, were derived, 177. 



*Goodman (D. J.) on protoplasm and 

 adipocere, 167. 



'Gordon (Col. T. E.) on the explora- 

 tion of the Pamir Steppe, 193. 



Graptolites in the Lower Ludlow rocks 

 near Ludlow, J. Hopkinson on the dis- 

 tribution of the, 69. 



Green (A. H.) on the variations in cha- 

 racter and thickness of the millstone- 

 gi-it of North Derbyshire and the 

 adjoining parts of Yorkshire, and on 

 the probable manner in which these 

 changes have been produced, 65. 



Greenwood (F.) on the preservation of 

 the bodies of the larger animals for 

 dissection, 167. 



* and L. C. Miall on vascular plex- 

 uses in the elephant and other ani- 

 mals, 170. 



Grenfell (J. G.) on carboniferous en- 

 crinites from Clifton and from Lan- 

 cashire, 65. 



Grey (Mrs. W.) on the standard of 

 national education, 213. 



*Groom-Napier (CO.) on vegetarianism, 

 169 ; on the localities from w^hence 

 the gold and tin of the ancients were 

 derived, 177; on legislative protection 

 to the birds of Europe, 217. 



Gunn (J.) on the influx and stranding 

 of icebergs during the so-called glacial 

 epoch, and a suggestion of the possi- 

 ble cause of the oscillation of the 

 level of land and water to which that 

 iuHux may be due, 66. 



Gunpowder, Dr. Debus on the chemical 

 theory of, 40. 



Kallett (P.) on the bearings of " the 

 conservation of force " on life, loO ; 

 on income fallacies and some of their 

 consequences, 215. 



*Hallidie's (A. S.) wire rope traction- 

 railway, W. .Smith on, 252. 



*Handyside (H.) on a steel gradient 

 formation, 248. 



Ilarcourt (A. G. V.), Addi-ess by, to the 

 Chemical Section, 32 ; *on an appa- 

 ratus for estimating carbon bisulphide 

 ill coal-gas, 43. 



*IIarper (R. R.) on block signalling on 

 railways, 248. 



Harrison (W. J.) on the occurrence of 

 Rhnetic beds near Leicester, 66. 



Hartshorne (B. F.) on the Weddas of 

 Ceylon, 175. 



Hayden (W.) on some geometrical 

 theorems, 14. 



