INDEX. 



827 



India, railway communications of, by 



W. C. Furnivall, 744. 

 , the recent progress of agriculture 



in, by C. L. Tupper, 532. 

 Indian geographical survey methods, the 



application of, to Africa, by Lt.-Col. 



T. H. Holdich, 717. 

 Indians of British Columbia, Dr. F. Boas 



on the, 408. 

 Innervation of the epipodial processes 



of some nudibranchiate moUusca, Prof. 



W. A. Herdman and J. A. Clubb on 



the, 692. 

 Instinctive criminality : its true character 



and national treatment, by Dr. S. A. K. 



Strahan, 811. 

 Internal phloem in the dicotyledons, 



notes on, by Prof. D. H. Scott, 696. 

 International standard for the analysis 



of iron and steel, third report on the 



best method of establishing an, 273. 

 Invariants, note on a method of research 



for, by E. B. Elliott, 568. 

 Inventors, the taxation of, by Dr. L. 



Edmunds, 743. 

 Iron and steel, the best method of esta- 

 blishing an international standard for 



the analysis of, third report on, 273. 

 Isomeric naphthalene derivatives, fifth 



report on, 265. 



Japan, the earthquake and volcanic 

 phenomena of, eleventh report on, 123. 



Jeffs (O. W.) on the collection, preserva- 

 tion, and systematic registration of 

 photographs of geological interest in 

 the United Kingdom, 321. 



Jenkins (H. C), note on the electrolysis 

 of alloys, 613. 



Johnston-Lavis (Dr.) on the volcanic 

 phenomena of Vesuvius and its neigh- 

 bourhood, 312. 



Jones (Prof. D. E.), on the measurement 

 of stationary Hertzian oscillations 

 along wires, and the damping of 

 electric waves, 561. 



Jones (Rev. E.), on the cave at Elbolton, 

 351. 



Jones (Prof. G. H.), barbaric elements in 

 ancient Greece and Italy, 803. 



*Jones (Prof. J. V.) and T. Harrison on 

 the periodic time of tuning-forks main- 

 tained in vibration electrically, 581. 



Jones (Prof. T. E.), Address to the Geo- 

 logical Section by, 614. 



Judd (Prof.) on the advisability and 

 possibility of establishing observations 

 upon the prevalence of earth tremors, 

 333. 



Jukes-Browne (A. J.), the cause of mono- 

 clinal flexure, 635 ; note on an un- 

 described area of lower greensand, or 

 vectian, in Dorsetshire, ib. 



*Karun river, the Bakhtiari country and 

 the, by Mrs. Bishop, 722. 



Kellaways beds, the continuity of the, 

 over extended areas near Bedford, 

 A. C. G. Cameron on, 636. 



Keltic (J. S.), recent geographical pro- 

 gress in Great Britain, 714. 



Kendall (P. F.), notes cf a section of drift 

 at Levenshulme, Manchester, 650. 



Kerr (Dr. J.) on researches on electro- 

 optics, 147. 



*Key (W.) on mechanical ventilation 

 and heating of buildings, 758. 



Kidston (R.) on the registration of all 

 the type specimens of British fossils, 

 299 ; on the collection, preservation. and 

 systematic registration of photographs 

 of geological interest in the United 

 Kingdom, 321. 



Kilimanjaro and Lake Chala, a visit to, 

 by Mrs. F. Sheldon, 719. 



Knubley (Rev. E. P.) on making a digest 

 of the observations on the migration of 

 birds, 363. 



Krause (Prof. W.) on anatomical nomen- 

 clature, 682. 



Labour and capital— their differences 

 and how to reconcile them, by C. H. 

 Perkins, 735. 



Lake Chala, a visit to Kilimanjaro and, 

 by Mrs. F. Sheldon, 719. 



*Lake Ngami region, journeys to the, by 

 H. D. Buckle, 719. 



*Lamington (Lord), the Siam border, 

 720. 



Langley (Prof. J. W.) on the best method 

 of establishing an international stand- 

 ard for the analysis of iron and steel, 

 273. 



Lankester (Prof. Eay) on the occupa- 

 tion of a table at the laboratory of the 

 Marine Biological Association at Ply- 

 mouth, 364 ; on the occupation of a 

 table at the zoological station at 

 Naples, 365. 



Larmor (J.) on the present state of our 

 knowledge of thermodynamics, spe- 

 cially with regard to the second law, 

 85 ; on electrolysis in its physical and 

 chemical bearings, 122 ; the action of 

 electrical radiators, with a mechanical 

 analogy, 560. 



Laurie (A. P.) on the existence of a com- 

 pound in alloys of gold and tin, 607. 



Lava beds of California and Idaho, the, 

 and their relation to the antiquity of 

 man, by Prof. G, F. Wright, 651. 



Lebour (Prof. G. A.) on the circulation 

 of underground waters, 300; on the 

 ■ advisability and possibility of esta- 

 blishing observations upon the preva- 

 lence of earth tremoi^ SH!* 



