INDEX II. 



273 



Magyar aud Fiu laugiiages, Hyde Clarke 

 on tlie Himalayan origin of the, 172. 



•Main (Rev. R."), li.st of meteors ob- 

 served at Oxford, 24. 



*Mallocli (A.) on a mode of producing 

 a sharp meridian shadow, 2G. 



Man in Britain, l)r. J. Beddoe on the 

 need of systematic observations on the 

 physical characters of, 204. 



Mansion (Prof. P.), elementary solution 

 of Huyghens's problem on the impact 

 of elastic balls, 18 ; on the singular 

 solutions of differential equations of 

 the first order which represent lines 

 at infinity, 19. 



Maori races in New Zealand, W. S. W. 

 Vaux on the origin of the, 178. 



*Markham (C. R.), report on the pro- 

 gress of the Arctic expedition, and on 

 the proceedings of H.M.S. 'Valorous,' 

 193. 



Martyn (Dr.) on some new researches 

 on the anatomy of the skin, 1(19. 



Mascarene Islands, I. B. Balfour on the 

 geological structure and flora of the, 

 157. 



*Masters (H.) on a sewer- trap, 250. 



iNIathematical and Physical Section, 

 Address by Prof. B. Stewart to the, 

 1. 



Mathematics of the chessboard, contri- 

 butions to the, by H. M. Taylor, 21. 



IMechanical Section, Address by W. 

 Fronde to the, 221. 



self-registering apparatus for baro- 

 meter, thermometer, rain- aud wind- 

 gauges, N. L. Lonsdale on, 200. 



*Melliss (J. C.) on the treatment of 

 sewage, 45. 



Mendips, the early inhabitants of the, 

 J. S. Pheue on the works, manners, 

 and customs of, 177. 



*Mercaptan, L. Jackson and A. Oppen- 

 heim on derivates of, 43. 



•Meridian shadow, a sharp, A. Malloch 

 on a mode of producing, 26. 



•Meteors observed at Oxford, list of, by 

 the Rev. R. Main, 24. 



•^Method of effecting the solution of dif- 

 ficultly soluble substances, A. H. Allen 

 on a, 37. 



*Miall (L. C. ) and F. Greenwood on 

 vascular plexuses in the elephant and 

 other animals, 170. 



Michell (R.) on the supposed lost lan- 

 guage and antiquity of theliii-ghiz, or 

 Buruts, 176. 



*]\Iilitary bidon, W. Smith on a, 252. 



Millstone-grit of North Derliyshire and 

 the adjoining parts of Yorkshire, 



A. H. Green on the variations in 

 character and thickness of the, and 

 on the probable manner in which 

 these changes have been produced, 65. 



Mirage at sea. Dr. J. Janssen on, 26. 



*Moa-bones in New Zealand, Dr. Hector 

 on the occurrence of, 161. 



Mofl'at (Dr. J.) on the apparent con- 

 nexion between sun-spots, atmospheric 

 ozone, rain, and force of wind, 31. 



*Money, W. Westgarth on the science 

 of capital and, 220. 



*Monteiro (J. J.) on the application of 

 the fibre oi Adaiisonia du/itata, 158. 



Montgomerie (Col. T. G.) on Hima- 

 layan glaciers, 193. 



Moore (C.) on the age of the Durdham 

 Djwn deposit, yielding Tliecodonto- 

 saunts, &c., 77. 



* (Dr. D. ) on Spiranlhes Romanzn- 



viaiia, 158. 



Moraines as the retaining walls of lakes, 

 E. Fry on, 64. 



Morgan (E. D.) on Prejevalsky's travels 

 in Mongolia and Northern Tibet, 194. 



Mortality of adolescence. Dr. J. Bed- 

 doe on the, 205. 



, comparative, of abstainers and 



non-abstainers from alcoholic liquors, 

 E. "N'ivian on the, 220. 



♦Mortimer (J. R.) on the distribution of 

 flint in the chalk of Yorkshire, 78. 



Motive power from the motion of a ship 

 among waves, B. Tower on a machine 

 for obtaining, 253. 



*Motors, Prof. J. D. Everett on the 

 calculus of, 11. 



Mouat (Dr. F. J.) on the value of 

 European life in India, 217. 



Mouutam-limestoue, certain isolated 

 areas of, at Luclrington aud Vobster, 

 J . M'^Murtrie on, 76. 



Miintz and Ramspacher's apparatus for 

 the estimation of tannic acid, J. Watts 

 on, 46. 



*Nachtigall (Dr. G.), expedition from 

 the Lake Tchad to the Upper Nile, 

 19,5. 



*Napier (Capt. the Hon. G.) on the 

 Turcoman frontier of Persia, 195. 



Nationality, anthropology, sociology, 

 and, D. Mackintosh on, 176. 



*Neill (Mrs. B.) on the acclimatization 

 of the silkworm, 218. 



Newton (A. ) on certain neglected sub- 

 jects of ornithological investigation, 

 162. 



*New Zealand, Dr. J. Hector on the geo- 

 logy of, 60. 



