INDEX. 
Turner (Prof. H. H.) on seismological 
investigations, 69. 
on @ new periodicity in earthquake 
frequency, 95. 
on establishing a solar observatory 
in Australia, 113. 
some notes on periodograms, 416. 
Tutin and coriamyrtin, C. R. Marshall on, 
643. 
TwentyMAn (A. E.) on the mental and 
physical factors involved in education, 
327, 
TyRRELL (G. W,), the alkaline igneous 
rocks of Ayrshire, 466. 
Ultra-violet light of high-speed electrons, 
the discharge of, Prof. R. A. Millikan 
on, 401 
Universal peace—cosmopolitan or inter- 
national—the economic basis of, by 
Ven. Archdeacon Cunningham, 545. 
Upper atmosphere, the investigation of the, 
eleventh report on, 105. 
——the temperature of the, Miss M. 
White on, 422, 
Upper Stort Valley, prehistoric remains 
in the, by Rev. Dr. A. Irving, 622. 
Uranium 2, radio-actinium, and thorium 
B, the chemical nature of, by A. Fleck, 
438, 
Use-acquirements, the origin and de- 
pendence of, on variation and selection 
of intra-cellular units, by C. J. Bond, 
500. 
Useful arts, the disappearance of, by 
Dr. W. H. R. Rivers, 598. 
VALENTINE (C. W.), 
vertical illusion, 655. 
Vapour densities, a new method of 
determining, Dr. G. E. Gibson on, 425. 
Vauauan (Dr. A.) on the preparation of 
a list of characteristic fossils, 135. 
VERWORN (Max), the physiological basis 
of memory and abstraction, 645. 
Vestigial floras, by A. R. Horwood, 686. 
Victoria Nyanza, from the, to the Kisii 
Highlands, hy Dr. F. Oswald, 529. 
Vincent (Prof. Swale) on the ductless 
glands, 291. 
—— on the effect of low temperatures on 
cold-blooded animals, 292. 
Vines (Prof. 8. H.) on the occupation 
the horizontal- 
of a table at the marine laboratory, | 
Plymouth, 190. 
Vital staining, a new method of, by Prof. 
Leon Asher, 655. 
*Vocational education from the point of 
view of a county area, by J. L. Holland, 
699. 
in girls’ schools, by Miss Faithful, 
699. - 
—— in schools, discussion on, 698. 
1912. 
* 
| 
897 
Vocational training in Edinburgh, by 
J. W. Peck, 698. 
*Voleanic necks, uncharted, at St. 
Andrews, by J. H. Wilson, 464. 
*Volcanic rocks, the, and their associated 
sediments of the Forfarshire Coast 
between the Red Head and Montrose, 
A. Jowett on, 470. 
Volcanic rocks around the Ord Hill of 
Rhynie, Aberdeenshire, the, by Dr, 
Wm. Mackie, 467. 
Volcanic rocks in Scotland, the sequence 
of, in relation to the Atlantic-Pacific 
classification of suess, by Dr. J. §. 
Flett, 465. 
Vulpine phalanger (T'richosurus vulpe- 
cula), the development of the thymus, 
epithelial bodies, and thyroid in the, 
by Miss E. A. Fraser and Prof. J. P. 
Hill, 511. 
Wace (A. J. B.) and M. §. THomeson, 
excavations at ;:Halos in Achea 
Phthiotis, 606. 
WaceEr (Harold) on the Jurassic flora of 
Yorkshire, 294. 
*Walden inversion, the, by Dr. A. Mc- 
Kenzie, 446. 
Watt (Dr. T. F.), the hysteresis loss in 
iron due to a combined pulsating and 
rotating magnetic field, 571. 
Water (Prof. A. D.) on the occupation 
of a table at the zoological station at 
Naples, 186. 
on anesthetics, 285. 
Patrick Blair's account of the 
nerves of the trunk of the Dundee 
elephant (1706), 638. 
the electrocardiogram by the 
oscillograph, 641. 
Wats (W. T. H.) on the influence of 
school books upon eyesight, 295. 
WatstneHam (Lord) on the compilation 
of an index generum et specierum 
animalium, 143. 
Warner (Dr. F.) on the mental and 
physical factors involved in education, 
*. 
327, 
*Water-beetle, the life-history of a, by 
F. Balfour Browne, 513. 
Water power and industrial developmen 
in the Scottish Highlands, by A. 
Newlands, 769. 
_ Watson (Col. Sir C. M.), Address to the 
Geographical Section, 518. 
Warson (Prof. W.) on the investigation 
of the upper atmosphere, 105. 
—— on gaseous explosions, 192. 
| Warr (Dr. H. J.) on the relation of mind 
to body, 648. 
Warts (Prof. W. W.) on the preparation of 
a list of characteristic fossils, 135. + § 
3M 
