INDEX. 
REINHEMER (H.), biological economy, 
*Reisner, Prof., his excavations 
Egypt on behalf of the Boston Museum 
and Harvard University, by Prof. G. 
Elliot Smith, 620. 
Reissner’s fibre and the sub-commissural 
organ in the vertebrate brain, by Prof. 
A. Dendy, 507. 
RENDLE (Dr. A. B.) on acquiring and | 
arranging collections illustrating the 
natural history, &c., of the Isle of Wight, 
191. 
Renniz (J.) on practical electrical stan- 
dards, 109. 
Rentout (Dr. R. R.), the prevention of 
mental degeneracy, 660. 
*Rescue apparatus for coal mines, by | 
F. Reid, 572. 
*Rew (R. H.), the sources of the nation’s | 
food supply, 734. 
Rerynoups (Prof. 8. H.) on the prepara- 
tion of a list of characteristic fossils, | 
135. 
on the igneous and associated rocks 
of the Glensaul and Lough Nafooey areas, 
cos. Mayo and Galway, 143. 
RuuMBLER (Prof. Dr. L.), the relation of | 
the mechanics of the cell to the 
mechanics of development, 499. 
Ripeeway (Prof. W.) on the distribution 
of artificial islands in the lochs of the 
Highlands of Scotland, 204. 
on archeological and ethnological 
researches in Crete, 224. 
on the lake villages in the neighbour- 
hood of Glastonbury, 270. 
on the age of stone circles, 273. 
on the excavation of a prehistoric site 
at Bishop's Stortford, 284. 
on a ‘find’ of bronze and iron 
javelins at Caria, 606. 
*River development in Central Scotland, 
by H. M. Cadell, 530. 
Rivers (Dr. W. H. R.) on the preparation 
of a new edition of ‘ Notes and Queries 
in Anthropology,’ 284. 
involved in education, 327. 
‘conventionalism ’ in primitive art, 
599. 
Road problem, the, by Rt. Hon. Sir J. H. A, 
Macdonald, 373. 
*Rosprnson (H.) and Prof. E. Rurner- 
FORD, the heating effect of radium 
emanation and its products, 399. 
Rosrnson (J.), the photo-electric proper- | 
ties of thin metallic films, 400. 
Roazrs (A. G. I.) on the feeding habits of 
British birds, 189. 
*Ross (J.), the feeding of cattle, 747. 
in | 
on the mental and physical factors | 
the disappearance of useful arts, | 
893 
Rotuscump (Hon, Walter) on the com 
pilation of an index generum et speci- 
erum animalium, 143. 
Ricker (Sir Arthur W.) on magnetic 
observations at Falmouth Observatory, 
103. 
on practical electrical standards, 109. 
| Rupuer (I. W.) on the work of the Corre 
sponding Societies Committee, 761. 
RUHEMANN (Dr. S.) on the transformation 
of aromatic nitroamines and allied sub- 
stances, and its relation to substitution in 
benzene derivatives, 116. 
Rusk (Dr. R. R.), movements in hand- 
writing, 702. 
Russet (Dr. E. J.) on the study of plant 
enzymes, 115. 
*RUTHERYFORD (Prof. E.), the origin of the 
beta and gamma rays from radio- 
active substances, 411. 
Ss and H. Rosinson, the heating 
effect of radium emanation and its 
products, 399. 
Saecanmina spherica (M. Sars) and 
Psammosphera fusca (Schulze), the 
distribution of, in the North Sea, E. 
Heron-Allen and A. Earland on, 498. 
*Sack (W.), the action of the corpus 
luteum on: metabolism, 658. 
Sakkara, recent excavations at, with 
special reference to the tomb of Hesy, 
by J. E. Quibell, 600. 
Sampson (Prof. R. A.) on seismological 
investigations, 69. 
on the calculation of the fields of 
telescopic object glasses, 418. 
SamureL (Rt. Hon. Herbert), federal 
government, 544. 
Sand, the transport and settlement of, 
in water, by Dr. J. S. Owens, 472. 
Sandwich Islands, the zoology of the, 
twenty-second report on, 189. 
SankEy (Capt. H. R.) on gaseous ex- 
plosions, 192. 
Santa Marra (Dr. A. S. de) and Prof. 
RaovuL Anruony, the suprasylvian 
operculum in the brains of primates, 
with special reference to its condition 
in man, 600. 
*Sarawak music, by Dr. C. S. Myers, 600. 
| Sardinia and Malta, the prehistoric monu- 
ments of, by Dr. T. Ashby, 610. 
| Sonirer (Prof. E. <A.), Presidential 
Address, 3. 
on the ductless glands, 291. 
| Scuarrr (Dr.) on the survey of Clare 
Island, 294. 
| Scholarships, small, a plea for supplement- 
| ing, by Prof. Marcus Hartog, 697. 
| School-books, the influence of, wpon eye- 
| sight, report on, 295. 
* 
