842 



INDEX. 



Stoney (Dr. G. J.), how to avoid the 

 misuse of the word • Force,' in attrac- 

 tions, electricity and magnetism, with- 

 out much departure from existing 

 Ijractice, 586. 



on a nomenclature for very much 



facilitating the use of systematic 

 measures, 687. 



Stookb (T. S.) on the circulation of 

 underground waters, 283. 



Stopes (H.) on the evolution of stone 

 implements, 776. 



(Mrs.), three Neolithic settlements 



in North Kent, 785. 



Strahan (A.) on underground tempera- 

 twe, 107. 



♦Strains, small, an apparatus for mea- 

 suring, Prof. J. A. Ewing on, 574. 



*SteA8burger (Prof, E.) on the periodic 

 variation in the number of chromo- 

 somes, 684. 



String, a stretched, a new explanation of 

 the wave-movements of, W. Barlow on, 

 503. 



Strobilus, a theory of. Prof. F. 0. Bower 

 on sterilisation and, 695. 



Strong (Oliver S.") on a modification of 

 Golgi's methods, 816. 



Stroud (Prof. W.) on the action of light 

 upon dyed colours, 238. 



Struthers (Prof. J.) on the carpus of 

 the Greenland right-whale compared 

 with that of tin- whales, 684. 



Suffocation in mines, the cause and pre- 

 vention of. Dr. J. S. Haldane on, 816. 



Sulphur, phosphorus and aldehyde, the 

 rate of oxidation of, Dr. T. Ewan on, 

 609. 



Sunlight in the High Alps, the iodine 

 value of, Dr. S. Rideal on, 612. 



♦Suprarenal extract. Prof. E. A. Schiifer 

 on effects of, 806. 



Surface-tension of soap-films, the effect 

 of gases on, H. Stansfield on, 569. 



Swinburne (James) on the ' hunting' of 

 governed engines, 758. 



Symoxs (G. J.) on the work of the Corre- 

 sponding Societies Committee, 19. 



on the best methods of recording the 



direct intensity of solar radiatio7i, 106. 



on underground temperature, 107. 



on the application of photography 



to the elucidation of meteorological 

 phenomena, 143. 



• on earth tremors, 145. 



on the circulation of underground 



waters, 283. 



on the climatological and hydro- 

 graphical conditions of Tropical Africa, 

 348. 



Tartrarsenites, G. G. Henderson and A. R. 



Ewing on the, 624. 

 Tasmania, some stone implements of 



Australian type from, Dr. E. B. Tylor 

 on, 782. 



*Tasmanian stone implements, H. Ling 

 Both on, 782. 



♦Tautomerism, investigations on, by Prof. 

 W. J. Briihl, 620. 



Taxation, Stock Exchange, Dr. J. Man- 

 dello on, 729. 



Taylor (H.) on practical electrical stati- 

 dards, 117. 



Teall (J. J. H.) on the collection, pre- 

 servation, and systematic registration 

 of photographs of geological interest in 

 the United Kingdom, 274. 



on the volcanic jihenomena of Vesu- 

 vius and its neighbourhood, 315. 



*Teichmuller (J.) on the specific con- 

 ductivity of copper, 592. 



Telegony, interim report on, 346. 



■f Telephone, an attempt at a quantitative 

 theory of the. Lord Rayleigh on, 573. 



t , the minimum current audible in 



the, Lord Rayleigh on, 572. 



* , photographic records of currents 



produced by speaking with a, the pro- 

 duction with the capillary electrometer 

 of, G. J. Burch on, 818. 



Temperature entropy diagrams, H. F. 

 W. Burstall on the, 758. 



as a factor in the distribution of 



marine animals. Dr. O. Maas on, 627. 



underground, report on, 107. 



Temple (Sir R.) on the teaching of science 

 in elementary schools, 359. 



Terraced hill slopes of North Oxfordshire, 

 E. A. Walford on the, 645. 



Tetanus, the voluntary, in man, on some 

 experiments to determine the time- 

 relations of, by D. Fraser Harris, 792. 



♦Thames bacillus. Prof. Marshall Ward 

 on a, 698. 



Thermodynamics, the present state of our 

 knowledge of, report on, by G. H. Bryan : 

 Part II., the laws of distribution of 

 energy and their limitations, 64. 

 Appendix : 



A. The possible laws of partition of 

 rotary energy in non-colliding rigid 

 bodies, 98. 



B. On the law of molecular distribution 

 in the atmosphere of a rotating planet, 

 100. 



C. On the application of the determi- 

 nantal relation to the kinetic theory 

 of polyatomic gases, by Prof. Ludwig 

 Boltzmann, 102. 



Thermometer, platinum, a direct reading 

 form of, G. M. Clark on, 758. 



Thomas (J. W.)(-w tlw proximate chemical 

 constituents of coal, 246. 



on the chemistry of coal formation. 



611. 



(T. H.) ow the legislative protection. 



of wild birds' eggs, 347. 



