INDEX. 



899 



ch-ess by Prof. E. C. K. Gonner to the 

 Section of, 727. 

 Steam, experiynenti on the condensation 

 of. Prof. H. L. Callenda/r and Prof. 

 J. T. Nicolsnn on, 418. 



I. A new apparatus for studying the 

 rate of condensation of steam on a 

 metal surface at different tempera- 

 tures and pressxt,res, hy Prof. H. L. 

 Callendar and Prof. J. T. Nicolson, 

 418. 



II. An electrical method of measuring 

 the temperature of a metal surface on 

 which steam is condensing, by Prof. 

 H. T. Callendar, 422. 



Steam, the specific heat of superheated. 



Prof. J. A. Ewing and S. Dunkerley on, 



554. 

 engine, the triple-expansion at 



Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 



Tests by Prof. C. H. Peabody on, 759. 

 Stebbing (Rev. T. R. R.) on zoological 



iihliography and publication, 359. 

 on the compilation of an ijidex gene- 

 rum et specierum animalium, 367. 

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



coral reef 297. 

 (Dr. G. N.) on the output of the 



mammalian heart, 813. 

 *Stilling, the function of the canal of, 



in the vitreous humour, Prof. Anderson 



Stuart on, 820. 

 Stomata, a preliminary account of a new 



method of investigating the behaviour 



of, F. Darwin on, 865. 

 Some considerations upon the func- 

 tions of, by Prof. 0. E. Bessey, 861. 

 of Holacantha Emoryi, the chimney- 

 shaped, Prof. C. E. Bessey on, 861. 

 Stonby (Dr. G. 3 ohnstone) on practical 



electrical standards, 206. 

 Steahan {k.)on life-zones in the British 



Carboniferous roclis, 296. 

 Strains and structures of the earth, O. H. 



Howarth on, G64. 

 Stratigraphical succession in Jamaica, 



R. T. Hill on the. 642. 

 *Steatton (S. W.) and Prof. A. A. 



MiCHELSON on new harmonic analyses, 



562. 

 Straws, the carbohydrates of cereal, Second 



report on, 294. 

 Strength of columns, Prof. G. Lanza on 



the, 755. 

 of white pine, red pine, hemlock, 



and spruce. Experiments by Prof. H. 



T. Bovey on the, 758. 

 *Streptothrix actinomycotica and allied 



species of Streptothryx, Prof. E. M. 



Crookshank on, 873. 

 Stroh (A.) on tlie B. A. screw gavge, 



426. 

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



upon dyed colours, 286. 



*Stuaet (Prof. Anderson) on the utility 

 of the spinal curves in man, 790. 



* on the function of the canal of 



Stilling in the vitreous humour, 820. 



* on some pieces of physiological 



apparatus, 820. 



*Stupart (R. F.) on the climatology of 

 Canada, 567. 



Sugar, the gastric inversion of cane, by 

 hydrochloric acid, Prof. Graham Lusk 

 on, 821. 



SULTE (B.) on an ethnological stUrvey of 

 Canada, 440. 



P7i the origin of the French Cana- 

 dians, 449. 



*SuMNER (Prof. W. G.) on the origin of 

 the dollar, 740. 



Sun-offerings, Blackfoot, R. N. Wilson on, 

 789. 



Surface tension of water, etc., the deter- 

 mination of the, by means of the 

 method of ripples, N. Ernest Dorsey 

 on, 551. 



Susceptibility of dia-magnetic and weakly 

 magnetic substances, A. P. Wills on, 

 586. 



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

 sponding Societies Committee, 23. 



on the application of photography 



to the elucidation of meteorological 

 phenomena, 128. 



on seismological investigation, 129. 



071 the climatology of Africa, 409. 



Sympathetic nervous system, the com- 

 parative physiology of the cells of the. 

 Prof. G. Carl Huber on, 822. 



Tables, mathematical. Interim report on, 

 a new Canon Arithvieticus, 127. 



Tanguay ( Abbe)o» an ethnological survey 

 of Canada, 440. 



Taylor (F. Bursley) on the Champlain 

 submergence and uplift, and their 

 relation to the Great Lakes and Niagara 

 Falls, 652. 



(H.) on practical electrical standards, 



206. 

 (J. J.) Anthropometric notes on the 



inhabitants of Cleckheaton, Yorkshire, 



by, 607. 

 Teaching of chemistry, reform in the, 



Prof. W. W. Andrews on, 601. 

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



photographs of geological interest in 



the United Kingdom, 298. 

 on differentiation in igneous magmas 



as a result of progressive crystallisation, 



661. 

 Tellurium, gold ores containing, the cause 



of loss incurred in roasting, Dr. T. K. 



Rose on, 623. 

 Temiscaming, Lake, Canada, the relations 



and structure of certain granites and 



3m 2 



