686 



INDEX. 



table at the zoological station at Naples, 



288. 

 Hydrocarbons of the formula (C5 H8)n, 



by Prof. W. A. Tilden, 49-t. 

 Hydrodynamics, report on recent progress 



in : Part TI., Special problems, 39. 

 Hydrogen dioxide, the mode of formation 



of, C. T. Kingzett on, 494. 



*Instructional system of arrangement in 

 provincial museums, F, T. Mott on an, 

 597. 



Intellectual faculties, the influence of the, 

 in relation to the direction and opera- 

 tion of the material organs, bj'G. Harris, 

 609. 



International geological map of Europe, 

 report on the preparation of an, 241. 



Iron and lead measures of Tynehead, 

 Alston, C. E. De Eance on the, 531. 



Irrawaddi river, some remarks on the 

 source of the, by C. H. Lepper, 612. 



Irving (Rev. A.), notes on Alpine post- 

 carboniferous (diassic) and triassic 

 geologj', 551. 



Japan, the eartliquake phenomena of, 



second report on, 205. 

 , the occurrence of tellurium and 



selenium in. Prof. E. Divers and 



M. Shimose on, 487. 

 Jeft'ery (H. M.)on the rectifiable spherical 



epicycloid, or involute of a small circle, 



453. 

 ■Jeffreys (Dr. Gwyn) on the Scottish 



zoological station, 282. 

 Jenkin (Prof. F.) on standards for use 



in electrical measurements, 70. 

 Jevon.s (Prof.) on the appropriation 



of wages and other sources of income, 



297. 

 *Jutes of the Isle of Wight, the, by J. 



Park Harrison, G07. 



Kansas, the geography and meteorology 



of, by Dr. L. Forbes, 625. 

 Keeping (W.) on the geology of Cardigan 



town, 531. 

 Kermode (P. M. C.) on the migration of 



birds, 283. 

 Kinahan (G.H.) on explorations in caves 



of carboniferous limestone in the South 



of Ireland, 240. 

 Kingzett (C. T.) on the activity of oxygen, 



and tlie mode of formation of hydrogen 



dioxide, 494. 

 Koch's discovery of the bacillus of tuber- 

 culosis, considerations arising from, by 



F. J. Faraday, 578. 



*Lacerta muralis, W. R. Weldon on the 

 early development of the, 579. 



Langley (Prof. S. P.) on the distribution 

 of energy in the solar spectrum, 459. 



Lankester (Prof. Kay) on tlie Scottish 

 zoological station, 282 ; on the occupa- 

 tion of a table at the zoological station 

 at Naples, 288. 



Lawrence (Eev. F.) on the survey of 

 Eastern Palestine, 296. 



Laws defining the strength of current 

 which can be sent through wires of 

 different diameters without rising the 

 external temperatuie above a certain 

 limit, Prof. G. Forbes on the, 668. 



Lawson (Prof. M. A.), Address by, to 

 the Department of Zoology and Botany, 

 580. 



Lebour (Prof. G. A.) on underground 

 temperature, 72 ; on the circulation of 

 underground waters, 213. 



Lee (J. E.) on tlie erratic blocks of 

 England, Wales, and Ireland, 243. 



Leech, the muscular tissue of the, T. 

 W. Shore, jun., on the structure of, 

 577. 



Lepper (C. H.), the question of an over- 

 land route to China from India rid 

 Assam, with some remarks on the source 

 of the Irrawaddi Pviver, 612. 



Levi (Prof. L.) on the work of the Com- 

 mittee for carrying out the recom- 

 mendations of the Anthropometric 

 Committee of 1880, 278 ; on the ap- 

 propriation of wages and other soiirces 

 of income, 297 ; the state of crime in 

 England, Scotland, and Ireland in 1880, 

 375. 



Light, white and coloured, the velocity 

 of. Prof. G. Forbes on, 441. 



Linear syzj'getic relations between the 

 coefficients of ternary qviadrics. Prof. 

 R. AV. Genese on, 452. 



Lister (T.) on the distribution and dates 

 of spring migrants in Yorkshire, com- 

 pared with West of England and 

 Ireland, 589. 



Liveing (Prof. G. D.) on the present state 

 of our knowledge of spectrum analysis, 

 120; on the preparation of a new series 

 of tables of wave-lengths of the spec- 

 tra of the elements, 144 ; Address by, 

 to the Chemical Section, 479. 



and Prof. Dewar on the reversals of 



the spectral lines of metals, 495. 



Lockyer (J. N.) on the proposed publica- 

 tion by the Meteorological Socieiy of 

 the Mauritius of daily synoptic charts 

 of the Indian Ocean from the year 

 1861, 38 ; on the preparation of a new 

 series of tables of wave-lengths of the 

 spectra of the elements, 144. 



Lodge (Dr. O. J.) on standards for use 

 in electrical measm'ements, 70. 



Lolo character of Western China, the, 

 by Hyde Clarke, 607. 



Loughton Camp, the ancient earthwork 

 in Epping Forest kno-wm as the, pre- 



