INDEX. 



877 



statistics and Economic Science, Ad- 

 dress to the Section of, by L. L. Price, 



764. 

 of wasps, Prof. F. Y. Edgeworth on 



the, 729. 

 Stbbbing (T. E. R.) on econom.y of 



labour in zoology, 728. 

 Stereornithes, a group of extinct birds 



from South America, C. W. Andrews 



on, 714. 

 *Sternum in HexacantMis r/ristms, the 



presence of a, Dr. Philip White on, 719. 

 Stewart (Prof. A.) on the structure of a 



coral reef, 392. 

 nStilbene derivatives, J. J. Sudborough 



on some, 662. 

 Stokes (8ir G. G.) <?» the hest methods 



of recording the direct intensity of 



solar radiation, 81. 

 Stone implements in Somaliland, H. W. 



Seton-Karr on, 824. 

 Stonesfield slate, second report on opening 



further sections of the, 414. 



the strata of the shaft sunk in 



1895 at, Edwin A. Walford on, 692. 



*Stoney (F. G. M.) and R. C. Napieb 

 on weirs in rivers, 796. 



(Dr. G. Johnstone) on the uni- 

 formity of size of pages of Scientific 



Societies' puhlicatio7is, 77. 



on the hest methods of recording the 



direct intensity of solar radiation, 81. 

 on practical electrical standards, 



195. 



— on motions competent to produce 

 groups of lines which have been ob- 

 served in actual spectra, 610. 



on a movement designed to attain 



astronomical accuracy in the motion 



of siderostats, 810. 

 Stooke (T. S.) on the circulation of 



miderground waters, 393. 

 Stopes (H.) on graving tools from the 



terrace-gravels of the Thames valley, 



826. 



on Palfeolithic projectiles, 826. 



Storage batteries, H. A. Earle on, 802. 

 ■Steahan (A.) on underground tempera- 

 ture, 75. 

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



upon dyed colours, 263. 

 Stutton, the trial boring at, \V. Whitaker 



on, 693. 

 Sudborough (J. J.) on some stilbene 



derivatives, 662. 

 ~— on the constitution of camphoric 



acid, 663. 

 •*SufEolk dialect, C. G. de Betham on the, 



831. 

 well-sections, W. Whitaker on some, 



436. 

 . and Norfolk, agricultural experi- 

 mental stations in, T, B. Wood on, 



660. 



SuMXER (J. C.) on the cchinoderm fauna 



of Plymouth, 471. 

 Surface, the influence of the, on the 



transfer of heat through plates, W. G. 



Walker on, 814. 

 Swinburne (.J.) on the uniformity of size 



of pages of Scientific Societies' j^uhlica- 



tions, 77. 

 Symbiosis in Tetraplodon, a supposed 



caj;e of, Prof. F. E. Weiss on, 855. 

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

 sponding Societies Committee, 39. 

 on underground temperature, 75. 



on the application of photograjjhy 



to the elucidation of meteorological 

 phenomena, 80. 



on the hest methods of recording the 



direct intensity of solar radiation, 81. 



on earth tremors, 184. 



on the circulation of underground 



waters, 393. 



071 the climatology of Africa, 480. 



* on autumn floods of 1894, 796. 



Tables, mathematical, Lieut. -Col. Allan 



Cunningham on a new canon aritli- 



meticus, 613. 

 Tarns near Snowdon, W. W. Watts on 



some, 683. 

 Taylor (H.) 07i practical electrical 



standards, 195. 

 on the volcanic pihenomena of Vesu- 

 vius and its neighhourhood, 351. 

 Teall (J. J. H.) on the collection of 



photographs of geological interest in 



the United Kingdom, 404. 

 Teeth in certain insectivora, the develop- 

 ment of the, M. F. Woodward on, 736. 

 Telegraph in the Chitra,l campaign, the 



field, P. V. Luke on, 809. 

 Telephone service in agricultural districts, 



Maj.-Gen. Webber on the development 



of the, 804. 

 Telephony, the development of, in 



Europe, A. E. Bennett on, 806. 

 Temperatures, underground, report on, 75. 

 * some recent improvements in 



measurements of high, E. H. Griffiths 



on, 638. 

 Tertiary lacustrine formations of North 



America, Prof. W. B. Scott on the, 681. 

 * strata of Belgium, the Upper, 



E. van den Broek on the present state 



of our knowledge of, 691. 



times, probable extension of the 



seas during Upper, in Western Europe, 

 G. F. Dollfus on, 690. 

 Tetrahedron, a species of, the volume of 

 any member of which can be de- 

 termined without employing the proof 

 of a proposition which depends on the 

 method of limits, Prof. M. J. M. Hill 

 on, 619. 



