INDEX. 



909 



Chemical Section, address by Prof. J. 

 Emerson Reynolds to the, 708. 



* Chemhtrij, the history of, {interim) rej)ort 

 on, 722. 



Cheshire and Lancashire, the prc-glacial 

 form of the ground in, C. E. De llance 

 on, 779. 



Children in elementary and other schools, 

 tlw physical deviations from tli£ normal 

 among, report on, G14r. 



Chiloe, the islands of, Mrs. Lilly Grove 

 on, 8.^3. 



Chlorine gas, the expansion of, under the 

 influence of light, Dr. A. Eichardson 

 on, 719. 



Chlorophyll -granule, the stnrch of tlie, 

 and the chemical processes involved in 

 its dissolution and translocation, H. T. 

 Brown on, 811. 



Christie (W. H. M.)o/j tlie best means of 

 comparing and reducing magnetic obser- 

 vations, 120. 



Cheystal (Prof. G.) on the best means of 

 comparing and reducing magnetic oh- 

 serrvations, 120. 



on practical electrical standards, 



127. 



Cinder Hill, Nottingham, a fault at, G. 

 Fowler on, 749. 



Citrazinic acid, W. J. Sell and T. H. 

 Easterfield on, 731. 



Clapham (Dr. Crockley) on the mad 

 head, 900. 



Clabk (Dr. J.) on lime salts in relation 

 to some physiological processes in the 

 plant, 818. 



Clarke (W. E.) on making a digest of 

 the observations on the migration of 

 birds, 524. 



Clayden (A. W.) on the applicatimi of 

 photography to the elucidation of 

 meteorological phenomena, 140. 



CliELAND (Prof. J.) on the development 

 of the molar teeth of the elephant, 

 with remarks on dental series, 808. 



Clifton (Prof. R. B.) 07i the establish- 

 ment of a national physical laboratory, 

 120. 



Climatological and hydrographical con- 

 ditions of tropical Africa, second report 

 on tlie, 572. 



Clowes (Prof. Frank) on the application 

 of the hydrogen flame in an ordinary 

 miner's safety lamp to accurate and 

 delicate gas-testing, 728. 



on a Nottingham sandstone con- 

 taining barium sulphate as a cement- 

 ing material, 732, *745. 



Clyde sea area, the : a study in physical 

 geography, by Dr. H. R. Mill, 836. 



Clyde Valley, the distribution of granite 

 boulders in the, Dugald Bell on, 780. 



*Coal, the proximate constituents of, in- 

 terim report on, 727. 



*Coal dust, the gases enclosed in, Prof. 

 P. P. Bedson on, 729. 



*C'oal mines, explosions in, discussion 

 on, with special reference to the dust 

 theory, 728. 



Cockroach {Periplaneta orientalis'), the 

 development of the ovipositor in the. 

 Prof. A. Denny on, 818. 



Cole (Prof. G. A. J.) on geology in 

 secondary education, 772. 



Collinge (W. E.) on the sensory canal 

 system of fishes, 810. 



Colour, organic, the origin of, F. T. Mott 

 on, 803. 



*Congo, the, and Lake Tanganyika, the 

 relation of, J. H. Reid on, 837. 



basin, the native tribes of the, en- 

 vironment in relation to, H. Ward on, 

 837. 



tribes, ethnographical notes relating 



to the, by Herbert Ward, 900. 



Conway (W. M.), exploration of the 

 glacial region of the Karakoram Moun- 

 tains by, report on the, 564. 



COPELAND (Prof. R.) on meteorological 

 observations on Ben Nevis, 280. 



•Coral reefs. Prof. W. J. Sollas on, 768, 807. 



• fossil and recent, discussion on, 



768, 807. 



COBDEAUX (J.) on malting a digest of the 

 observations on the migration of birds, 

 524. 



Cornwall, the radiolarian cherts of, 

 Howard Fox on, 771. 



Corresponding Societies Committee, report 

 of tlw, 85. 



Cortex of Tmesipteris tannensis, Bernh., 

 R. J. Harvey Gibson on the, 817. 



Crandall Basin, Wyoming, the dissected 

 volcano of. Prof. J. P. Iddings on, 753. 



, the petrological features of. Prof. 



J. P. Iddings on, 763. 



Creak (Capt.) on the best means of com- 

 paring and reducing magnetic observa- 

 tions, 120. 



Crete, prehistoric remains in, John L. 

 Myres on, 899. 



Croft (W. B.) simple apparatus for ob- 

 serving and photographing interfer- 

 ence and diffraction phenomena, 685. 



on physics teaching in schools, 700. 



Ceosskey (Dr. H. W.) an the circulation, 

 of underground waters, 463. 



on the erratic blocks of England, 



Wales, and Ireland, 514. 

 • on the teaching of science in elemen- 



tary schools, 566. 

 Crustacea, decapod, the larva of, Edgar 



J. Allen on, 547. 

 CuNDALL (J. T.) on the influence of the 



silent discharge of electricity on oxygen 



and other gases, 439. 

 and W. A. Shenstone, ozone from 



pure oxygen : its action on mercury. 



