822 



INDEX. 



Bloxam (G. W.) 071. the exploration of 

 Hadramoiit, in Southern Arabia, 354. 



on an etlmograjthieal survey of the 



United K'mgdom, 419. 



on the physical and mental devia- 



tions from the Tiormal among children 

 in schools, 434. 



on anthropometric Kork in schools, 



439. 



on the work of the anthropometric 



laboratory at the JVottingham. meeting, 

 444. 



on the JVorth- Western tribes of the 



Dominion, of Canada, 453. 



•fJiLUNDBLL (H. W.) on a journey in the 

 Libyan desert, 716. 



Boas (Dr. F.) on the Indian tribes of the 

 Lower Fraser River, 454. 



Body and mind, the relations between, 

 as expressed in early languages, cus- 

 toms, and myths, Kev. G. Hartwell 

 Jones on, 779. 



BOLTZMANN (Prof. L.) on the application 

 of the detenninantal relation to the 

 kinetic theory of jwlyatomio gases, 

 102. 



on Maxwell's method of deriving 



the equations of hydrodynamics from 

 the kinetic theory of gases, 579. 



Bonnet (Prof. T. G.) on the work of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 19. 



on the collection, presereation, and 



registration ofphvtographs of geological 

 interest in the United Kingdom, 274. 



, a comparison of the pebbles in the 



Trias of Budleigh Salterton and of 

 Cannock Cliase, 655. 



on the probable temperature of the 



glacial epoch, 660. 



Borneo, the alleged presence of negritoes 

 in, H. Ling Roth on, 780. 



*r>otanical diagrams exhibited by Prof. 

 Kny, 689 ; by Prof. L. Errera, 696. 



Botany and zoology of the West India 

 Islands, serenth report on the present 

 state of our knowledge of tlie, 344. 



BoTTOMLEY (Dr. J.' T.) ou practical 

 electrical standards, 117. 



Bourne (G. C.) on investigations made 

 at the Marine Biological Association 

 laboratory at Plymouth, 345. 



(Stephen) oti the teaching of s^ien^e 



in elementary schools, 359. 



Bow as a musical instrument, H. Bal- 

 four on the, 778. 



BOWEB (Prof. F. O.) on sterilization and 

 a theory of the strobilus, 695. 



Brabrook (E. AV.) on an ethnographical 

 survey of the United Kingdom, 419. 



■ on the physical and mental devia- 

 tions from the normal among children 

 in schools, 434. 



on anthropometric work in schools, 



439. 



BeAgige (Robert) and Henry Lea on a 



special chronograph, 757. 

 *Brain, the valuation of proportional 



dimensions in the description of the. 



Prof. L. Manouvrier on, 788. 



of a young Fuegian, Prof. L. 



Manouvrier on the, 787. 



Bramwell (Sir F. J.) on earth tremors, 

 145. 



• on methods of determining the dry- 

 ness of steam in boiler trials, 392. 



f .some reminiscences of steam loco- 

 motion on common roads, 748. 



*British camps and a long barrow near 

 Rushmore, exploration of, by Gen. 

 Pitt-Rivers, 784. 



* Isles, a new representation of the 



vertical relief of the, B. V. Darbishire 

 on, 718. 



Brown (Prof. A. Crum) on meteoro- 

 logical observations on Ben Nevis, 108. 



(M. Walton) on earth tremors, 145. 



Browne (Montagu) on some vertebra.te 



remains from the Rhastic strata of 

 Britain, 657. 



*Beuhl (Prof. \V. J.) investigations on 

 tautomerism, 620. 



Bryan (G. H.) report on the present state 

 of our knowledge of thermo-dynamics. 

 Part II. : the laws of distribution of 

 energy and their limitations, 64. 



BuCHAN (Dr. A.) on meteorological obser- 

 vations on Ben Nevis, 108. 



Buchanan (J. Y.) on making geo- 

 graphical, meteorological, and natural 

 history observations in South Georgia 

 or other Antarctic island, 358. 



f , researches by the Prince of 



Monaco in the North Atlantic and 

 Mediterranean during the summer of 

 1894, 717. 



BucKLAND (Miss A. W.) on the signifi- 

 cance of objects with holes, 790. 



BULLEID (A.) on the lake village at 

 Glastonbury, 431. 



*BURCH (G. J.) on the production with 

 the capillary electrometer of photo- 

 graphic records of currents produced 

 by speaking with a telephone, 818. 



Burke (J.) on the luminosity observed 

 when a vacuum bulb is broken, 585, 



BuRSTALL (H. F. W.) on the tempera- 

 ture entropy diagrams, 758. 



Bute (Lord) on the prehistoric and 

 ancient remains of Glamorganshire, 

 418. 



Calf Hole Cave, near Skipton, report on 

 the e.Tj)loratio7i of the, 272. 



Calibration of engineering laboratory- 

 instruments, Prof. D. S. Capper on 

 the, 759. 



Campbell (Prof. D. H.) on the origin 



