828 



INDEX. 



FOBBES (H. 0.) on making geographical, 

 meteorological, and natural history 

 observations in South Georgia or other 

 Antarctic island, 358. 



' Force,' how the misuse of the word in 

 attractions, electricity, and magnetism 

 may be avoided without much de- 

 parture from existing practice, by Dr. 

 G. J. Stoney, 586. 



FOESTEB (Prof. W.) on the displacements 

 of the rotational axis of the earth, 476. 



FoSTEB (Dr. C. Le Neve) on underground 

 temperature, 107. 



(Prof. G. C.) on practical electrical 



standards, 117. 



(Prof. M.) on the occupation of a 



table at the zoological station at Naples, 

 336. 



on investigations made at the Marine 



Biological Association laboratory at 



Plynumth, 345. 

 Fox (Howard) on a soda felspar rock at 



Dinas Head, north coast of Cornwall, 



655. 

 FoxwELL (Prof. H. S.) on the methods of 



economic training in this and other 



countries, 365. 

 France, economic studies in, H. Higgs 



on, 384. 

 Feankland (Prof. Percy) on the electro- 

 lytic viethods of quantitative analysis, 



160. 

 Feaser (James) 071 the character of the 



high-level shell-bearing dejwsits at Clara, 



Cliapelhall, and other localities, 307. 

 Feedeeicq (Prof. Leon) on an aerotono- 



meter and a gas-burette, 807. 

 Freezing-point of aqueous solutions which 



freeze at temperatures just below 0° 



C, Dr. M. Wildemann on P. B. Lewis' 



method for accurately determining 



the, 567. 

 FresneVs diffraction theory and Babincfs 



principle, a lecture-room experiment to 



illustrate, by Prof. A. Cornu, 480. 

 Fuchsian functions, Prof. Mittag-LeflBer 



on, 577. 

 Fuegian, a young, the brain of. Prof. L. 



Manouvrier on, 787. 



Galloway (W.) on underground tem- 

 perature, 107. 



Galt (A.) and Lord Kelvin, preliminary 

 experiments for comparing the dis- 

 charge of a Leyden jar through differ- 

 ent branches of a divided channel, 555 



, Lord Kelvin, and M. Maclean, 



preliminary experiments to find if sub- 

 traction of water from air electrifies 

 it, 554. 



Galton (Francis) on the worh of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 19. 



on an ethnographical survey of the 



United Kingdom, 419. 



Galton (Sir Douglas) on the work of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 19. 



on the circulation of underground 



maters, 283. 



on the j)hysical deviations from the 



normal among children in schools, 434. 

 Galvanometers, delicate, Prof. A. Schuster 



on the construction of, 572. 

 ■^Gardner (J. A.) and J. E. Marsh on 



some derivatives of camphene, 629. 

 Gaeson (Dr. J. G.) on the 7vork of the 



Corresponding Societies Committee, 19. 



on the cave at Flbolton, 270. 



071 the exploration of Hadramoutj 



in Southern Arabia, 354. 



071 the prehistoi-io a7id a7iGie7it 



remains in Ola7norganshire, 418. 

 — on a7i ethnographical survey of the 

 United £i7igdom, 419. 



on the physical deviations from the 



7iormal amoyig children in schools, 434. 

 on anthropomet7'ic 7vork in schools. 



439. 



— 071 the 7vork of the anthropometric 

 laboratory at the Nottingham meeting, 

 444. 



on the long barrow skeletons from 



Rushmore, 784. 



*Garstang (W.) on the ancestry of the 

 Chordata, 683. 



Garwood (E. J.) on the collection, pre- 

 servation, a7id systematic registratiorh 

 of photographs of geological interest in 

 the United Kingdom, 274. 



Gas-burette and an aerotonometer, Prof. 

 L6on Fredericq on a, 807. 



Gases, polyatomic, the application of the 

 determinantal relation to the kiTietio- 

 theo7'y of. Prof. L. Boltzmann on, 

 102. 



Gaule (Prof. Justus) on trophic changes- 

 in the nervous system, 794. 



Gbikie (Sir A.) on underground tem- 

 2>eratvre, 107. 



• on the traces of two rivers belong- 

 ing to Tertiary time in the Inner 

 Hebrides, 652. 



(Prof. J.) on the collection, pre- 



servation, and systematic registration- 

 of photographs of geological interest in 

 the United Kingdom, 274. 



Geographical, 7neteorological, and natural 

 history observations in South GcorgiOr 

 or other Antarctic island, report of the 

 Committee for 7naking, 358. 



photography, John Thomson on, 714. 



Section, Address by Capt. W. J. L. 



Wharton to the, 699. 



Geography of Lower Nubia, S. Clarke on 

 the, 718. 



'Geological classification and nomencla- 

 ture, the current method of, with pro- 

 posals for its revision. Sir H. Howorth 

 on, 663. 



