868 



REPORT — 1895. 



Geeen (Prof. A. H.) on the search for the 

 missin/f remains of the Cetiosaurus in 

 the Oxford Museum, 403. 



on the Stonesfcld slate, 414. 



(E. E.) on tlie Coccida3 of Ceylon, 



731. 



(Prof. J. Reynolds) on the diurnal 



variation in the amount of diastase in 

 foliage leaves, 856. 



Geegory (J. W.) on the structure of a 

 coral reef, 392. 



Gpjffiths (E. H.) on practical electrical 

 standards, 195. 



* on a new practical heat standard, 



628. 



* on some recent improvements in 



measurements of high temperatures, 

 illustrated by apparatus recently ac- 

 quired by the Kew Observatory Com- 

 mittee, 638. 



Grove (Mrs. Lilly) on the origin of the 

 dance, 830. 



GUNDRT (R. S.) on the menace to Eng- 

 lish industry from tlie competition of 

 silver-using countries, 777. 



GiJNTHER (Dr. A. C. L. G.) on the zoology 

 and hotany of the ^\'est India Islands, 

 472. 



GUPPY (H. B.)ow the structure of a coral 

 reef, 392. 



Haddon (Prof. A C.) on the structure 



of a coral reef, 392. 

 on the marme zoology, botany, and 



geology of the Irish Sea, 455. 



on. an ethnographical survey of the 



United Kingdom, 509. 



on the Royal Dublin Society's 



Fishery Survey, 723. 



on the Fishery School at Rings- 



end, near Dublin, 723. 



on the exi^loration of the islands 



of the Pacific, 731. 



* on illustrations of folk-lore, 831. 



Hale (H.) on the North- Western tribes 

 of the Dominion of Canada, 522. 



Haliburton (R. G.) on the North- 

 Western tribes of the Dominion of 

 Canada, 522. 



Haloids, the pii'^duction of, from pmre 

 ■materials, interim, report on, 341. 



Hansen (Dr. Emil Chr ) on experimental 

 studies in the variation of yeast cells, 

 852. 



Harcouet (Prof. L. F. "Vernon) on the 

 rate of erosion of the sea-coasts of Eng- 

 land and Wales, 352. 



. Address to the Section of Mechani- 

 cal Science by, 782. 



on the new outlet of the river Maas 



at the Hooli of Holland, and the im- 

 provement of the Scheur branch up to 

 Rotterdam, 796. 



Harden (Arthur) and Sir H. E. Roscoe 

 on a new view of the genesis of 

 Dalton's atomic theory, derived from 

 original manuscripts, 656. 



Harjiee (F. W.) on the southern 

 character of the mollusca of the 

 Coralline Crag, 675. 



on the derivative shells of the Red 



Crag, 676. 



on the importance of extending the 



work of the Geological Survey of Great 



Britain to the deep-seated rocks by 



means of boring, 693. 

 t Harmonic analyser, G. U. Yule on a, 630. 

 Harrison (B.) on the high-level Jlint- 



driftofthe Challi, 349. 

 Hartland (E. Sidney) on an ethmi- 



grapMcal survey of the United Kingdom, 



509, 513. 

 Hartley (Prof. W. N) on wave-length 



tables of the spectra of the elements and 



compounds, 273. 

 Harvie-Brown (J. A.) on mahing a 



digest of the observations on the migra- 

 tion of birds, 473. 

 *Harwich, the growth of the Port of, W. 



Birt on, 796. 

 Hastings, an ancient Mtchen midden at, 



report on, 500. 

 Hatch (Frederick H.) on the auriferous 



conglomerates of the Witwatersrand, 



Transvaal, 691. 

 Hawkshaw (J. C.) on the structure of a 



coral reef, 392. 

 *Heat standard, discussion on a new 



practical, proposed by E. H. Griffiths, 



C2S. 



the transfer of, through plates 



with variously arranged surfaces, W. 

 G. Walker on, 814. 



Heatlby (.J. T. P.) on the port of the 



Upper Nile in relation to the highways 



of foreign trade, 760. 

 Heats of evaporation of different liquids 



at their boiling points. Prof. W. 



Ramsay and Miss Dorothy Marshall on 



a method of comparing the, 628. 

 Helium. C. Runge and F. Paschen on the 



constituents of cleveite gas, 610. 

 and argon. Lord Rayleigh on the 



viscosity and refraction of, 609. 

 *Hendrick (T.) on agriculture and 



science, 660. 

 Henrici (Prof. 0.) on the teaching of 



geometrical drawing in schools, 608. 

 Heedman (Prof. W. A.) on the marine 



zoology, botany, and geology of the Irish 



Sea, 455. 



Address to the Section of Zoology 



by, 698. 



and Prof. Rubert W. BOYCE on 



oysters and typhoid, 723. 

 *Hereditary polydactylism. Dr. Gregg 

 Wilson on, 733. 



