908 



INDEX. 



plienomena of Japan, 214 ; on the 



iphysiologieal action of the in/ialation 



of oxygen in asphyxia, more esjiccially 



in coal mines, 651 . 

 BOULT (A. J.) and Dr. S. RiDEAL on the 



application of sodium peroxide to 



water analysis, 725. 

 Bourne (Stephen) on the teaching of 



science in elementary schools, 566. 



* on index numbers, 851. 



Bbabeook (E. W.) on the exploration of 



Ancient lie mains in Abyssinia, 557. 

 — — on the physical deviations from the 



normal avwng children in elementary 



and other scfwols, 614. 

 on an ethnographical survey of tlie 



United Kingdom., 621. 

 Beamwell (Sir F. J.) on earth tremors, 



287. 



on the dryness of steam in boiler 



trials, 572. 



British fossils, the registration of the tyjte 

 specimens of, fourth report on, 482. 



Broggeb (Prof. W. C.) on the genetic 

 relations of the basic eruptive rocks of 

 Gran (Kristiania region), 76i!. 



Bromine vapour, the expansion of, under 

 the influence of light, Dr. A. Richard- 

 son on, 719. 



Bbook (G.) on the marine zoology of the 

 Irish. Sea, 626. 



on the comjnlation of an index 



generum et speci^:rum. animalium, 553. 



Beown (Prof. A. Crum) on meteoro- 

 logical observations on Ben Nevis, 280. 



*Beown (G. E.) and Dr. W. W. J. 

 NiCOL on the action of potassium per- 

 manganate on sodium thiosulphate 

 and sulphate, 725. 



Beown (Horace T.) on the starch of the 

 chlorophyU-granule, and the chemical 

 processes involved in its dissolution 

 and translocation, 811. 



Beown (M. Walton) on earth tremors, 

 287. 



Beowne (Montague) on some vertebrate 

 remains not hitherto recorded from the 

 Rhffitic beds of Britain, 748. 



Beuce (W. S.) on seals and whales seen 

 during the voyage to the Antarctic 

 Ocean, 1892-93, 807. 



. — — on an Antarctic voyage, 840. 



Beyan (G. H.), the moon's atmosphere 

 and the kinetic theory of gases, 682. 



on electro-magnetic trails of images 



in plane, spherical, and cylindrical cur- 

 rent sheets, 706. 



•Bubbles, oil, a peculiar motion assumed 

 by, in ascending tubes containing 

 caustic solutions, F. T. Trouton on, 

 705. 



BUCHAN (Dr. A.) on meteorological obser- 

 vations on Ben Nevis, 280. 



♦Buchanan (J. y.) on the influence of 



land and water on the temperature of 



the air, 835. 

 BUCKLAND (Miss A. W.) on ' four' as a 



sacred number, 898. 

 BULLEID (Arthur) on a British village of 



Marsh (Lake) Dwellings at Glaston- 

 bury, 903. 

 Bunsen and Roscoe's pendulum actino- 



meter. Dr. A. Richardson and J. Quick 



on a modified form of, 719. 

 BuEGESs (Dr. J.) on Scottish place- names, 



554. 



Calorimetry by surface thermometry and 

 hygrometry. Dr. A. D. Waller on, 799. 



Cambrian in Wales, the base of the, Dr. 

 H. Hicks on, 750. 



Cameron (A. C. G.) on a transported 

 mass of chalk in the Boulder Clay at 

 Catworth, in Huntingdonshire, 760. 



Canada, North- Western tribes of the Do- 

 miniun of, {interim) report on the physi- 

 cal cha^'acters. languages, and industrial 

 and social condition of the, 653 



Cannan (Edwin) on tJae diminution of 

 the net immigration from the rest of 

 the country into the great towns of 

 England and Wales, 1871-91, 851. 



Caria, the geology of the coastland of, 

 J. L. Myres on, 746. 



Caepmael (C. H.) on the best means of 

 comparing and reducing magnetic ob- 

 servations, 120. 



Caeruthees (W.) 071 the j^i'csent state of 

 our hnoKledge of the zoology and botany 

 of the West India Islands, and on taking 

 steps to investigate ascertained deficien- 

 cies in the fauna and flora, 524. 



Cattle (Dr. C. H.) and Dr. James 

 MiLL.'VE on certain gregarinidae, and 

 the possible connection of allied forms 

 with tissue changes in man, 809. 



Catworth in Huntingdonshire, a trans- 

 ported mass of chalk in the Boulder 

 Clay at, A. C. G. Cameron on, 760. 



Caustic curves, a familiar type of, J. 

 Larmor on, 695. 



Catley (Prof. A.) on carrying on the 

 tables connected with the Pellian equa^ 

 Hon, 73. 



on calculating tables of certain 



mathematical functions, 227. 



Ceplialaspis, the discovery of, in the 

 Caithness flags. Dr. R. H. Traquair, on, 

 747. 



Cephalopoda, the luminous organs of, W. 

 B. Hoyle on, 802. 



Cervus giganteus, bones and antlers of, 

 incised and marked by mutual attri- 

 tion while buried in bogs or marl, V. 

 Ball on, 756. 



Chalk, a transported mass of, in the 

 Boulder Clay at Catworth in Hunting- 

 donshire, A. C. G. Cameron on, 760. 



