INDEX. 
*GrabHam (G. W.) on the country north 
of Lake Albert, 476, 530. 
* secondary quartz on pebbles, 476. 
Grampus, the skull of a, Prof. R. J. 
Anderson on, 502. 
Graphics, the use of the exponential 
curve in, by Dr. H. B. Heywood, 414. | 
Grasslands, the influence of origin and 
topography on, by Dr. W. G. Smith and 
C. B. Crampton, 736. 
Gray (H. St. G.) on the lake villages in 
the neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 270. 
*Gray (Dr. J. G.), some new spinning 
tops, 405. 
and G. BuRNsIDE, 
gyroscope apparatus, 567. 
Gray (M. H.) on seismological investi- 
gations, 69. 
Gray (R. K.) on seismological investiga- 
tions, 69. 
*Great Barrier Reef, the, by Prof. C. 
Hedley, 535. 
Great Illusion, the, discussion on, 545. 
GREEN (Prof. J. A.) on the mental and 
physical factors involved in education, 
327. 
* 
some new 
Green (Rev. W. 8.) on the biological | 
problems incidental to the Belmullet 
whaling station, 145. 
GREENHILL (Sir George) on the further 
tabulation of Bessel and other functions, 
39. 
GREENLY (Edward) on the crystalline rocks 
of Anglesey, 125. 
on the origin of some of the mica- 
schists of Anglesey, 468. 
a thecry of the Menai Strait, 475. 
Grecory (Prof. J. W.) on the preparation 
of a list of characteristic fossils, 135. 
GreGorY (Prof. R. A.) on the influence of | 
school-books wpon eyesight, 295. 
—- on the curricula and educational 
organisation of industrial and poor- | 
law schools, 319. 
on the mental and physical factors 
involved in education, 327. 
on the overlapping between secondary 
education and that of universities, &c., | 
338. 
Grirritus (Principal E. H.) on practical 
electrical standards, 109. 
on the overlapping between secondary 
education and that of universities, &c., 
338. 
on the work of the Corresponding 
Societies Committee, 761. 
GruBer (Charles M.), blocking nerve 
impulses aroused in cut and _ intact 
nerves, and in strychninised and 
normal frogs, 649, 
a comparison of naturally and 
artificially aroused impulses under the 
influence of nerve blocks, 650. 
883 
| Guanidine group, the, in the protein 
molecule, by Prof. A. Kossel, 656. 
Guyot (Yves), the nationalisation of 
the Western Railroad, 554. 
| *Gyroscope apparatus, some new, by 
Dr. J. G. Gray and G. Burnside, 567. 
Happon (Dr. A. C.) on the preparation of 
a new edition of * Notes and Queries in 
Anthropology,’ 284. 
—— on the excavation of a prehistoric site 
at Bishop's Stortford, 284. 
—— on the work of the Corresponding 
Societies Committee, 761. 
Haten (Bernard P.), alternating load 
tests, 569. 
Harpert (J. N.) on the feeding habits of 
British birds, 189. 
Haupane (Dr. J. 8.) on the relation of 
mind to body, 647. 
Haut (A. D.) on the study of plant 
enzymes, 115. 
Halos in Achza Phthiotis, excavations 
at, by A. J. B. Wace and M. 8. Thomp- 
son, 6U6. 
*HAMBURGER (Prof. H. J.), demonstra- 
tion of a method for measuring phago- 
cytosis, 655. 
Handwriting, movements in, by Dr. R. R, 
Rusk, 702. 
*HARDEN (Dr. 
445, 
Harpy (Dr. W. B.) on the occwpation of 
a table at the zoological station at 
Naples, 186. 
on the dissociation of oxy-hemo- 
globin at high altitudes, 290. 
Harker (Alfred) on the crystalline rocks of 
Anglesey, 125, 
Harker (Dr. J. A.) on gascous explosions, 
192. 
Harman (Dr. N. B.) on the influence of 
school-books wpon eyesight, 295. 
Harmer (F. W.) on the erratic blocks of 
the British Isles, 132. 
Harmer (Dr. 8. F.) on the occupation of a 
table at the zoological station at Naples, 
186. 
Harper (Alan G.), vitality and distribu- 
tion of growth in defoliated larch 
trees, 684. 
Harrison (Rev. S. N.) on the erratic 
blocks of the British Isles, 132. 
Harrt.anp (LE. S.), folklore as an element 
of history, 603. 
Harrog (Prof. Marcus) on zoology or- 
ganisation, 190. 
a plea for supplementing small 
scholarships, 697. 
Heavy mineral grains in the sands of the 
Scottish carboniferous, the, by T. O. 
Bosworth, 474. 
A.), 
hexosephosphate, 
3L2 
