.INDEX. 



'83^ 



Lakes, the bathymetrical survey of 

 French, E. Delebeoque on, 712. 



Lamp, a ten-candle, for u.se in pho- 

 tometry, A. Vernon Harcourt on, 582. 



Langley (Dr. J. N.) on the inftuence of 

 prci-ions fertilisation of the female on 

 her subsequent offsjjriitff, and the effect 

 of maternal inipressi&ns during preg- 

 iwrncy on the offspring, 346. 



(Prof. J. W.) on the best method of 



establishing an international standard 

 for the analysis of iron and steel, 237. 

 (Dr. S. P.) 071 recent researches in 



the infra-red spectrv/n, 4C5. 

 Language, a common, between man and 



other animals. Miss A. G. Weld on the 



possibility of, 780. 

 Lankestee (Prof. E. Ray) 07i the occupa- 

 tion of a table at the zoological station 



at Naples, 335. 

 on investigations made at the Marine 



Biological Laboratory at Plymouth, 345. 



* on chlorophyll in animals, 684. 



Larynx, an attempt to supply motor 



power from a new source to the 



muscles of the, Vet.-Capt. F. Smith 



on, 815. 

 Latham (Baldwin) on the climatological 



and hydrograjyhical conditions of Tropi- 

 cal Africa, 348. 

 *Laitrie (A. P.) on the diffusion of very 



dilute solutions of chlorine and iodine, 



620. 

 (Malcolm) on the eurypterid-bearing 



deposits of the Pentland Hills, 302. 

 *Layard (Miss N. F.) on a method of 



taking casts of the interiors of flowers, 



696. 

 LazabuS-Barlow (Dr. W. S.) on lymph 



formation, 810. 

 Lea (Henry) and Robert Bbagge on a 



special chronograph, 757. 

 Lebouk (Prof. Gr. A.) on underground 



temperature, 107. 



on earth tremors, 145. 



on the circulation of underground 



waters, 283. 

 Lewes (Prof. Vivian B.) om the proximate 



chemical constituents of cnal, 246. 

 Lewis (P. B.) and Dr. M. Wildebmann 



on a method for accurately determining 



the freezing-point of aqueous solutions 



which freeze at temperatures just below 



0° C, 507. 

 Lex Barbarorum of the Dnghestan, Prof. 



Maxime Kovalevsky on the, 785. 

 Leyden-jai', the discharge of a, through 



different branches of a divided current, 



preliminary experiments for comparing, 



by Lord Kelvin and A. Gait, 555. 

 •fLibyan desert, a journey in the, H. W. 



Blundell on, 716. 

 Light, the action of, upon dyed colours, 



report on, 238. 

 1894. 



♦Light, Clerk Maxwell's theory of, Prof. 

 O. J. Lodge on experiments illustrating, 

 582, 814. 



Lighthouse apparatus and lighthouse 

 administration in 1894, J. Kenward 

 on, 760. 



Linear substitution, formulse for, by Prof. 

 E. B. Elliott, 581. 



Linkage for the automatic description of 

 regular polygons, Prof. J. D. Everett 

 on a, 559. 



Liquids, the viscosity of, and their 

 chemical nature. Dr. T. E. Thorpe and 

 J. W. Rodger on the relations between, 

 615. 



LiVEiXG (Prof. G. D.) on n-ave-length 

 tables of the spectra of the elements and 

 compounds, 248. 



Liver, the fats of the, D. Noel Paton on, 

 804. 



LOBLEY (Prof. J. Logan) on the cause of 

 earthquakes, 649 



Lobby de Bedyn (Dr. C. A.) on some 

 experiments with free hydroxylamine, 

 606. 



Loch (C. S.), statistics of comparative 

 general and old-age pauperism in 

 England and Wales, 1831 to 1891, 

 732. 



LOCKYER (J. N.) on n-are-length tables 

 of the spectra of the elements and com- 

 pounds, 248. 



Lodge (Dr. Oliver J.) on practical elec- 

 trical standards, 117. 



* on photo-electric leakage, 556. 



*. on experiments illustrating Clerk 



Maxwell's theory of light, 582, 814. 



* on an electrical theory of vision, 



582, 815. 



* and Prof. F. GoTCH on some 



physiological effects of the passage of 

 rapidly alternating currents of great 

 intensity through nerve, 818. 



*L0HEST (Prof. Max) on the antiquity 

 of man in Belgium, 784. 



London County Council, the 'economic 

 heresies' of the, Sidney Webb on, 735. 



Loochooan language, Prof. Basil Hall 

 Chamberlain on the, 789. 



Lubbock (Sir J.) on the legidat ire pro- 

 tection of wild birds' eggs, 347. 



on the teaching of science in ele- 

 mentary schools, 359. 



Lumhiosity observed when a vacuum 

 bulb is broken, J. Burke on the, 585. 



LUMMEB (O.) and E. Pringsheim, a 

 new determination of the ratio of the 

 specific heats of certain gases, 505. 



Lymph formation. Dr. W. S. Lazarus- 

 Barlow on, 810. 



* formation, the mechanical theory 



of. Dr. Starling on, 810. 



Lyttle (Dr. J. Shaw) on the effects of 

 after-damp, 817. 



3h 



