INDEX. 



879 



Viscosity and refraction of argon and 

 helium, Lord Kayleigh on, 609. 



*Vital units, ultimate, Miss Nina Layard 

 on, 737. 



*'ViViAN (J.) on the machinery employed 

 in the East Anglian coal exploration, 

 79.5. 



VOGEL (Dr. H. W.) on orthochromatic 

 photograph}', (itiO. 



Volcanic pJienomoia, of Vesuvius a/nd its 

 neighhourlwod, final report on the, 351. 



and earthqnalie plienomena of 



Japan, the fourteenth report on the, 

 81 ; the fifteenth report on the. 113. 



Vortex aggregates, Prof. W. M. Hicks on 

 bicyclic, 612. 



, Hill's spherical, Prof. W. M. Hicks 



on, 612. 



* theory, Prof. Hicks's cellular, sug- 

 gestions as to matter and gravitation 

 in, by C. V. Burton, 613. 



Wageb (Harold) on the structure of 



bacterial cells, 856. 

 Wages, comparison of the rate of increase 



of, in the United States and in Great 



Britain, 1860-1891, A. L. Bowley on, 



775. 

 Walford (Edwin A.) on the Stonesfield 



slate, 414. 



on the strata of the shaft sunk at 



Stonesfield in 1895, 692. 



Walker (A. 0.) on the marine zooloqy, 

 botany, and geology of the Irish Sea, 

 455. 



(G. T.) on a dynamical top, 613. 



(W. G.) on the transfer of heat 



through plates with variously arranged 

 surfaces, 814. 

 Ward (Prof. Marshall) on a false Bac- 

 terium, 850. 



on the formation of bacterial 



colonies, 854. 



Ware and Cheshunt, the dip of the under- 

 ground Palff^ozoic roclis at, Joseph 

 Francis on, 441. 



Warfare, the light thrown on primitive, 

 by the languages and usages of his- 

 toric times. Rev. G. Hartwell Jones on, 

 832. 



Warington (Prof. E.), How shall agri- 

 culture best obtain help from science ? 

 341. 



Warner (Dr. Francis) on, tlie physical 

 and mental defects of children inschools, 

 503. 



Wasps, the statistics of. Prof. F. Y. 

 Edgeworth on, 729. 



Water, bacterial life in river. Dr. E. 

 Frankland on the conditions affecting, 

 731. 



Watson (W.) o)i the comjfarison of mag- 

 netic instruments, 79. 



Watts (Dr. Marshall) on wave-length 

 tables of the spectra of the elements and 

 compounds, 2T3. 



(W. W.) on the collectioii of photo- 

 graphs of geological interest in the 

 United Kingdom, 404. 



on some tarns near Snowdon, 



683. 



*Wa\e forms, alternate, some new 



methods and apparatus for the 



delineation of, J. M. Barr, W. B. 



Burnie, and Charles Rodgers on, 638. 

 Ware-length tables of the spectra of the 



elements and compounds, report on, 



273. 

 * ■ tracers, Prof. W. E. Ayrton and T. 



Mather on alternating, 638. 

 Wealden flora of England, A. C. Seward 



on the, 856. 

 Webber (Maj.-Gen.) on light railways 



as an assistance to agriculture, 793. 

 on the development of the telephone 



service in agricultural districts, 804. 

 *Weirs in rivers, R. C. Napier and F. G. M. 



Stoney on, 796. 

 Weiss (Prof. F. E.) on the marine zoology, 



botany, and geology of the Irish Sea, 



455. 

 on a supposed case of symbiosis in 



Tetraplodon, 855. 

 Well-sections, some Suffolk, W. Whitaker 



on, 436. 

 West (G. S.) on the poi.son apparatus of 



certain snakes, 737. 

 West India Islands, eighth report on the 



zoology and botany of the, 472. 

 Weston (Rev. Walter) on exploration in 



the Japanese Alps, 1891-94, 761. 

 Wethered (E.) on underground tem- 

 perature, 75. 

 Wharton (Adm. W. J. L.) on the rate 



of erosion of the sea-coasts of England 



and Wales, 352. 



on the structure of a coral reef, 



392. 



Wheeler (W. H.) on the effect of wind 

 and atmospheric pressure on the tides, 

 795. 



Whitaker (W.) on the work of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 39. 



071 the rate of erosion of the sea- 

 coasts of England and Wales, 352. 



second chronological list of works 



on the coast-changes and shore-deposits 

 of England and Wales, 888. 



on the circulation of underground 



waters, 393. 



second list of works referring to 



underground mater, England and 

 Wales, 394. 



- on some Suffolk well-sections, 436. 

 Address to the Section of Geology, 



666. 



on the trial-boring at Stutton, 693. 



