910 



INDEX. 



with a note on the silent discharge of 



electricity, 439. 

 Cunningham (Lieut. -Col. Allan) on 



agreeable numbers, 699. 

 (Prof. D. J.) on an ethnographical 



survey of tlie United Kingdom, 621. 

 ■ (Prof. W.) 071 the methods of economic 



training adopted in this and other 

 countries, 571. 



on Bishop Hugh Latimer as an 



economist, 853. 



Currency, the, and India, L. L. Price on, 

 858 ; F. C. Harrison on, 859. 



* problem. Prof. H. S. Foxwell on 



the, 857. 



question, the, practically con- 

 sidered from a commercial and finan- 

 cial point of view, W. E. Dorrington 

 on, 857. 



Dancing, the ethnographic aspect of, 

 Mrs. Lilly Grove on, 895. 



♦Cards and Siah-Posh Kafirs, Dr. J. 

 Beddoe and Dr. Leitner on, 901. 



Dahwin (Prof. G. H.) on the best means 

 of comparing and reducing magnetic 

 observations, 120. 



on earth tremors, 287. 



(Horace) on earth tremors, 287. 



bifilar pendulum designed by, 291. 



Davis (J. W.) on the collection, preserva- 

 tion, and systematic registration of 

 photographs of geological interest in 

 the United Kingdom, 473. 



Davison (C.) on earth tremors, 287. 



Dawkins (Prof. W. Boyd) on the collec- 

 tion, preservation, and systematic regis- 

 tration of photographs of geological 

 interest in the United Kingdom, 473. 



. on the erratic blocks of England, 



Wales, and Ireland, 514. 



on an ethnographical survey of the 



United Kingdom, 621, 

 * on the place of the Lake Dwellings 



at Glastonbury in British archaeology, 



903. 

 Dawson (Dr. G. M.)o» the Worth- Western 



tribes of the Dominion of Canada, 653. 

 *Decle (Lionel) on funeral rites and 



ceremonies among the Tshinya'i, or 



Tshinyangwe, 900 ; * on the Arungo 



and Marombq ceremonies among the 



Tshinyangwe, ih. ; * on the Ma-Goa, ib. 

 * Beep-sea tom-net, {interim') report on a, 



803. 

 Denny (Prof. A.) on the development of 



the ovipositor in the cockroach {Peri- 



planeta orientalis'), 818. 

 Db Range (C. E.) on the circulation of 



underground waters, 463. 

 on the erratic blocks of England, 



Wales, and Ireland, 514. 

 on the pre-glacial form of the ground 



in Lancashire and Cheshire, 779. 



Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, the 

 gypsum deposits of, A. T. Metcalfe on 

 the, 760. 

 Dewar (Prof. J.) on wave-length tables 

 of the spectra of the elements and 

 compounds, 387. 

 Dickenson (B. B.) on the use of the 

 lantern in geographical teaching, 842. 

 Dickson (H. N.) on the temperature and 

 density of sea water between the 

 Atlantic Ocean and the North Sea, 

 835. 

 Diffraction and interference phenomena, 

 simple apparatus for observing and 

 photographing, W. B. Croft on, 685. 

 Digestive ferments of a large protozoon, 

 M. Hartog and A. E. Dixon on the, 

 801. 

 *■ Diprotodon remains in Australia, Prof. 



W. Stirling on the discovery of, 784. 

 Discussions : 



*0n teaching physical science in 

 schools, 700. 



Apparatus for elementary prac- 

 tical physics, Prof. G. C. Foster 

 on, 700. 

 Teaching physics in school.*, 

 W. B. Croft on, 700; A. E. 

 Hawkins on, 701. 

 *0n the present position of bacte- 

 riology, more especially in its relation 

 to chemical science, 723. 

 Bacteriology in its relation to 

 chemical science. Prof. P. F. 

 Frankland on, 441. 

 ♦Chemistry of bacteria, R. Waring- 

 ton on the, 723. 

 *0n explosions in coal mines, with 

 special reference to the dust theory, 

 728. 

 On the limits of geology and geography, 

 *753, f 833. 

 •f The limits between physical geo« 

 graphy and geology, Clements 

 R. Markham on, 834. 

 The relations of geology to 

 phj'sical geography, \V. Topley 

 on,"'834. 

 ♦Coral reefs, fossil and recent, opened 



by Prof. W. J. SoUas, 768, 807. 

 ♦On geological education, 772. 



Geology in secondary education. 



Prof. G. A. J. Cole on, 772. 

 Geology in prof essional education. 

 Prof. G. A. Lebour on, 773. 

 Disease in Africa, the distribution of. 



Dr. R. W. Felkin on, 839. 

 Dispersion, anomalous, a mechanical 

 analogue of, R. T. Glazebrook on, 688. 

 Dixon (A. E.) and Marcus Haetog on 

 the digestive ferments of a large proto- 

 zoon, 801. 

 Donald (C. \V.) on the penguins of the 

 Antarctic Ocean, 808. 



