840 
*Vale of Neath, the carboniferous lime- 
stone at the head of the, by C. H. 
Cunnington, 499. 
VALENTINE (C. W.), colour perception 
and preferences of an infant at three 
months, 689. 
experiments on the methods of 
teaching reading, 747. 
VANSTONE (Ernest), the influence of 
chemical constitution on the thermal 
properties of binary mixtures, 426. 
—— the electrical conductivities of 
sodium amalgams, 428. 
VauGuHAN (Dr. A.) on the preparation of 
a list of characteristic fossils, 150. 
the division between the lower 
and upper Avonian, 480. 
VeE.EY (Prof.) on electromotive phenomena 
in plants, 241. 
Vernon (R. D.) on;the correlation of 
the Leicestershire coalfield, 478. 
Verrucaria margaracea, an aquatic lichen, 
the structure and life-history of, by 
Miss E. M. Poulton, 714. 
Verstuys (Dr. J.) on the phylogeny of 
the carapace, and on the affinities of the 
leathery turtle, Dermochelys coriacea, 
791. 
Vetacapsula, some new features in, by 
L. Moysey, 492. 
Via Appia, the, by Dr. T. Ashby, 630. 
Vincent (Prof. Swale) on the ductless 
glands, 259. 
on the effect of low temperatures on 
cold-blooded animals, 261. 
Vines (Prof. 8S. H.) on the occupation 
of a table at the marine laboratory, 
Plymouth, 155. 
Viroconium, the Roman town of, at 
Wroxeter, Salop, excavations on the 
site of, by J. P. Bushe-Fox, 629. 
Visual images, some experimental data 
concerning the localisation of, by 
Prof. R. M. Ogden, 678. 
Volatility of metals, the, by Prof. T. 
Turner, 427. 
* 
Wace (A. J. B.) on the distribution of 
artificial islands in the lochs of the 
Highlands of Scotland, 228. 
and Dr. J. T. Jenu, excavations 
in the Kinkell Cave, St. Andrews, 649. 
Wave (E. B. H.), longitude work in 
Egypt, 555. 
Wanpsworth (J. T.) on the oviposition of 
Urophora solstitialis Linn., 529. 
Wacer (Harold) on the Jurassic flora of 
Yorkshire, 264. 
Wainweicut (G. A.), the people of 
Keftiu and the Isles from the Egyptian 
monuments, 643. 
*Walden inversion, Prof. P. F. Frank- 
land on the, 430. 
INDEX. 
Wales and the border, the ethnography 
of, by Prof. H. J. Fleure and T. C. 
James, 638. 
WaurorpD (Edward A.) on the structure 
of the lias ironstone of South Warwick- 
shire and Oxfordshire, 474. 
on some of the basement beds of 
the great oolite and the crinoid beds, 
482. 
Waker (Dr. E. W. A.) and Prof. 
GrorcEes DREYER on the study of the 
blood and vascular system, 674. 
on the effect of altitude on 
the blood, 675. 
WALLER (Prof. A. D.) on the occupation 
of a table at the zoological station at 
Naples, 153. 
on anesthetics, 237. 
on electromotive phenomena in plants, 
241. 
on colour vision and colour blindness, 
258. 
WALLER (Mrs.) on electromotive pheno- 
mena in plants, 241. 
Watmistey (A. T.), metals for struc- 
tures, 606. 
Watsu (W. T. H.) on the influence of 
school-books upon eyesight, 268. 
*Waring’s problem, Prof. J. E. A. 
Steggall on, 400. 
WaRNER (Dr. F.) on the mental and 
physical factors involved in education, 
302. 
Warts (Dr. H.) on the classification of 
igneous rocks, 494. 
Waterways, the, of France, Belgium, and 
Germany, by F. R. Durham, 577. 
English, the improvement and uni- 
fication of, by Lord Shuttleworth, 575. 
inland, discussion on, 575. 
in England, by 
Dunwoody, 577. 
Waterways and canals of the United 
Kingdom, the, reasons why the State 
should improve, by Sir J. P. Griffith, 
576. 
Watson (Arnold T.) on the habits and 
building organ of the tubicolous 
polychete worm Pectinaria (Lagis) 
Koreni, Mgr., 512. 
Warson (D. M. S.), the early evolution 
of the amphibia, 532. 
Watson (Dr. W.) on the investigation 
of the wpper atmosphere, 130. 
on gascous explosions, 166. 
*Wartt (Dr. H. J.), some main principles 
of integration, 677. 
Watts (Prof. W. W.) on the igneous and 
associated rocks of the Glensaul and 
Lough Nafooey areas, cos. Mayo and 
Galway, 150. 
on the preparation of a list of 
characteristic fossils, 150. 
* 
R. B. 
