INDEX. 
Geological Section, Address by Prof. | 
E. J. Garwood to the, 453. 
*Geology of the country round Bir- 
mingham, the, by Prof. C. Lapworth, 
472. 
Geology of the district between Aber- | 
eiddy and Pencaer, Pembrokeshire, | 
the, by Dr. A. H. Cox and Prof. O. T. 
Jones, 484. 
*German forestry methods, by Prof. 
Fraser Story, 767. 
*GirrorD (Lt.-Col. W.), a partially cor- 
rected fluor-quartz lens system for | 
spectrum photography, 431. 
Git (Sir David) on establishing a solar 
observatory in Australia, 132. 
Git (Rev. H. V.), the distribution of 
large earthquakes in space and time, 
397. 
Gills, the homology of the, in the light 
of experimental investigation, by 
Prof. H. Braus, 523. 
Gmoaneuam (C. T.), nitrification in some 
pasture soils, 777. 
and Prof. B. T. P. Barker on the 
fungicidal action of Bordeaux mixture, 
767. 
Ginkgoalian leaf, a new type of, H. H. 
Thomas on, 709. 
Glastonbury, the lake villages in the neigh- 
bourhood of, report on, 224. 
GLAZEBROOK (Dr. R. T.) on seismological 
investigations, 45. 
on the investigation of the wpper 
atmosphere, 130. 
on practical electrical standards, 133. 
on gaseous explosions, 166. 
GuEapow (F.) and C. E. S#ackxez, 
Birmingham Snow Hill station altera- 
tions, 610. 
Globular stellar system, the dynamics of 
a, by Prof. A. 8. Eddington, 388. 
Gop (E.) on the investigation of the upper 
atmosphere, 130. 
and F. J. WuiprLz, temperature 
frequency curves, 396. 
*Goldschmidt dynamo, the, by Prof. 
T. R. Lyle, 407. 
Goopry (T.) on the protozoa of soil, 
775, 
* 
Goopricu (E. 8.) on the occupation of a 
table at the zoological station at Naples, | 
153. 
on the biological problems incidental 
to the Belmullet whaling station, 154. 
on the occupation of a table at the 
marine laboratory, Plymouth, 155. 
*Gorpon (J. W.) on an engineering 
theory of the gyrostal, 606. 
Gorton (Prof. F.) on the structure and | 
function of the mammatian heart, 258. | 
Gray (H. St. G.) on the lake villages in | 
the neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 224. 
825 
xRAY (M. H.) on seismological investi- 
gations, 45. 
Gray (R. K.) on seismological investiga- 
tions, 45. 
_Green (Prof. J. A.) on the mental and 
physical factors involved in education, 
302. 
GREEN (J. F. N.) on the geology of Ramsey 
Island, Pembrokeshire, 151. 
GREEN (Rev. W. 8.) on the biological 
problems incidental to the Belmullet- 
whaling station, 154. 
GREENHILL (Sir George) on the further 
tabulation of Bessel and other functions, 
87. 
Gregory (Prof. J. W.) on the preparation 
of a list of characteristic fossils, 150. 
on Australia, 553. 
Gregory (Prof. R. A.) on the influence of 
school-books upon eyesight, 268. 
——on the curricula and educational 
organisation of industrial and fpoor- 
law schools, 301. 
-—— on the mental and physical factors 
involved in education, 302. 
Grecory (Dr. W. K.), convergence and 
allied phenomena in the mammalia, 
525. 
exhibition of a fossil skeleton of 
Notharctus rostratus, an American 
eocene Jemur, with remarks on the 
phylogeny of the primates, 529. 
GrirritH (Sir J. P.), reasons why the 
State should improve the canals and 
waterways of the United Kingdom, 576. 
GRIFFITHS (Principal E. H.) on practical 
electrical standards, 133. 
on the work of the Corresponding 
Societies Committee, 324. 
on sclolarships, d&c., held by uni- 
versity stidents, and on funds available 
for their augmentation, 306. 
Address to the Educational Section, 
722. 
GRossMANN (Dr. J.), the utilisation of 
sewage in agriculture, 771. 
Gurst (J. J.) on stress distributions in 
engineering materials, 168. 
Guinea-pigs, habit-formation in, Miss 
E. M. Smith on, 680. 
Gunda ulve, the regeneration of, the 
influence of osmotic pressure on, by 
Miss D. J. Lloyd, 514. 
Gypsy pedigree, a, and its lessons, by 
Rey. G. Hall and Dr. W. H. R. Rivers, 
625. 
Gypsy taboos and funeral rites, by T. W. 
Thompson, 625 
| *Gyrostal, an engineering theory of the, 
J. W. Gordon on, 606. 
Habit and memory, the relation between, 
by Miss May Smith, 681. 
