828 
Indian national alphabet, an, by Rey. 
J. Knowles, 744. 
*Indigo in the vat, decomposition 
products of, by H. Ehrhardt, 427. 
Industrial and oor-law schools, the 
curricula, and educational organisation 
of, report on, 301. 
Industrial credit system, the, and im- 
prisonment for debt, by W. H. White- 
lock, 580. 
Industry planning and human geography, 
by C. R. Enock, 586. 
Inheritance, experiments in, sixth report 
on, 155. 
Inland waterways, discussion on, 575. 
= in England, by R. B. Dunwoody, 
577. 
*Integration, some main principles of, 
by Dr. H. J. Watt, 677. 
Internal combustion engine, the, as 
applied to railway locomotion, by 
F. W. Lanchester, 599. 
International conference on the high 
cost of living, what it would do, by 
Prof. Irving Fisher, 580. 
*International tables of physical 
chemical constants, report on, 405. 
*Inverness Firth, the physical geography 
of the entrance to, by A. G. Ogilvie, 
553. 
Trish barley experiments, 
by J. H. Bennett, 772. 
Irish barley experiments, the precision 
of the, by Dr. F. E. Hackett, 774. 
Irvine (Rev. Dr. A.), flint and its genesis, 
487. 
the Solutré type of horse (#. robus- 
tus) in prehistoric Britain, 534. 
prehistoric horse remains in the 
Stort Valley, &c., 650. 
and P. A. Irvine, the Harlow 
boulder clay and its place in the 
glacial sequence of Eastern England, 
480. 
Irvine (P. A.) and Rev. Dr. A. Irvine, 
the Harlow boulder clay and its place 
in the glacial sequence of Eastern 
England, 480. 
*Isle of Man, the natural history survey 
of the, report on, 511. 
Isle of Wight, the natural history, geo- 
graphy, and antiquities of, report on 
acquiring and arranging collections 
illustrating, 155. 
and 
1901-1907, 
James (T. C.) and Prof. H. J. Fueurz, 
pbooep ey, of Wales and the border, 
638. 
JEANS (J. H.) on radiation, 376, 384, 385. 
JEFFREY (Prof. E. C.) and Dr. D. H. 
Scorr, fossil plants showing structure 
from the base of the lower carbonifer- 
ous of Kentucky, 708. 
INDEX, 
Jzunu (Dr. T. J.) on the upper old red 
sandstone of Dura Den, 150. 
and A. J. B. Wacsn, excavations 
in the Kinkell Cave, St. Andrews, 649. 
Jouns (Cosmo) on the preparation of a 
list of characteristic fossils, 150. 
Jounson (F.) on the degradation or 
enhancement of quality of commercial 
copper by the presence of impurities, 
451. 
| Jounson (Gilbert E.) on parasitic and 
other eelworms, 526. 
JouNSON (Prof. T.) on the old red sand- 
stone rocks of Kiltorcan, Ireland, 152. 
Jounston (Col. Sir D. A.) on atlas, 
textual, and wall maps for school and 
university use, 156. 
Jones (Prof. O. T.) on the geology of 
Ramsey Island, Pembrokeshire, 151. 
and Dr. A. H. Cox, the geology of 
the district between Abereiddy and 
Pencaer, Pembrokeshire, 484. 
on various occurrences of 
pillow lavas in North and South 
Wales, 495. 
Jonzs (W. Neilson), some investigations 
in anthocyan formation, 713. 
Jubaland, Southern, across, from the 
coast to Mount Kenia, by I. N. 
Dracopoli, 548. 
Jupp (Prof. J. W.) on seismological in- 
vestigations, 45. 
Jurassic flora of Yorkshire, report on the 
investigation of the, 264. 
Kapp (Prof. Gisbert), Address to the 
Engineering Section, 587. 
*Katathermometer, the, by Prof. Leonard 
Hill, 673. 
Kay (Henry) on the stream-courses of the 
Black-Country plateau, 473. 
the Black Country and its border- 
land, 551. 
Keesxe (Prof. F.) on the study of plant 
enzymes, 143. 
on the flora of the peat of the Kennet 
Valley, 265. 
Keertine (B. F. E.), the precision of 
field observations for latitude, 556. 
Keene (H. B.), the transmission of 
X-rays through metals, 403. 
Keftiu and the Isles, the people of, 
from the Egyptian monuments, by 
G. A. Wainwright, 643. 
Kerra (Prof. A.) on the organisation of 
anthropometric investigation in the 
British Isles, 230. 
on paleolithic sites in the West of 
England, 237. 
Keir (Dr. J. Scott) on geographical 
teaching in Scotland, 161. 
KeEnpDatt (Prof. P. F.) on the preparation 
of a list of characteristic fossils, 150. 
