INDEX. 
Australian cranium of probable pleisto- 
cene age, Profs. T. W. Edgeworth 
David and J. T. Wilson on, 531. 
Australian culture, is it simple or com- 
plex ? by Dr. W. H. R. Rivers, 529. 
Australian defence, by Hon. G. F. Pearce, 
477. 
Australian democracy, the, and its 
economie problems, by F. W. Eggle- 
ston, 469. 
Australian ebenaceer, by W. P. Hiern, 
575. 
*Australian exploration, by Rt. Hon. 
Sir John Forrest, 446. 
Australian frogs, a collection of, J. Booth 
on, 398. 
Australian geographers, three early: 
their work, and how it is remembered, 
by C. R. Long, 444. 
Australian hematozoa, Dr. J. B. Cleland 
on some, 405. 
Australian insects, mimicry in, discussion 
on, 402. 
Prof. E. B. Poulton on, 402. 
Australian longitudes, the present state 
of the problem of, discussion on, 292. 
—— P. Baracchi on, 292. 
Australian marine kainozoic deposits, 
the correlation of the: evidence of the 
echinoids, bryozoa, and some verte- 
brates, by Prof. J. W. Gregory, 376. 
Australian Meeting: narrative and itin- 
erary, 679. 
Australian ports in relation to modern 
ships and shipping, by W. E. Adams, 
508. ; 
Anstralian rainfall, by H. A. Hunt, 439. 
*Australian timbers, by Prof. W. H. 
Warren, 512. 
Australian trematodes and cestodes: a 
preliminary study in zoogeography, 
by Dr. 8. J. Johnston, 424. 
* Aviation research, by Prof. J. E. Petavel, 
499. 
Bacterial toxins in soils, by Dr. R. Greig- 
Smith, 667. 
Batey (P. G.) on wool inheritance, 654. 
ad on size inheritance in poultry, 
655. 
BarysripGe (Prof.) on the question of | 
fatigue from the economic standpoint, 
175. 
Baxer (R. T.) and H. G. Smiru, the 
vorrelation between the specific charac- 
ters of the Tasmanian and Australian 
eucalypts, 582. 
Bawrour (H.) on the lake villages in the 
neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 210. 
* some extensions of early stone | 
age culture, 527. 
759 
Bau (Sidney), economics at Oxford, 472. 
7*Batsium (J. G.), the Balsillie system 
of wireless telegraphy as employed 
in the radiotelegraph stations of 
Australia, 514. 
Baraccut (P.), Mount Stromlo Observa- 
tory, 291. 
—— on the present state of the problem 
of Australian longitudes, 292. 
Barley, migration of reserve material 
to the seed in considered as a factor 
of productivity, by E. $8. Beaven, 660. 
Bartow (W.) on the correlation of crysial- 
line form with molecular structure, 109. 
Barr (Prof. A.) on stress distributions in 
engineering materials, 200. 
Barrett (Dr. James W.), the problem of 
the visual requirements of the sailor 
and the railway employee, 256. 
Barrineton (R. M.) on the. biological 
problems incidental to the Belmaullet 
whaling station, 125. 
Barrow (G.) on the fauna and flora of 
the trias of the Western Midlands, 
114. ; 
Basidiomycetes, the spores of, by Dr. 
J. Burton Cleland, 586. 
BassxtT (Prof. H.) on the structure of 
atoms and molecules, 300. 
BatErson (Prof. W.), Presidential Ad- 
dress, 3. 
—— on experimental studies in the physi- 
ology of heredity, 245. 
—— on breeding experiments with cno- 
theras, 247. 
Baruer (Dr. F. A.) on the preparation 
of a list of stratigraphical names used 
in the British Isles, 113. 
——on the position of the Antarctic 
whaling industry, 123. 
—— on the character, work, and main- 
tenance of museums, 249. 
Beare (Prof. T. Hudson) on some tests 
of petrol motor fire engines, and the 
frictional and other resistances to the 
flow of water through canvas fire- 
hose, 511. 
Braven (EH. S.), migration of reserve 
material to the seed in barley con- 
sidered as a factor of productivity, 
660. 
Brrsy (G. §.), the artificial regulation 
of wages, 487. : 
Belmullet whaling station, the biological 
problems incidental to the. report on, 125. 
Benson (Prof. Margaret), recent ad- 
vance in our knowledge of Sigillaria, 
584. 
*Brenson (W. N.), the occurrence of 
spilitic lavas in New South Wales, 381. 
Berripce (Dr. Emily M.) on the 
systematic position of casuarina and 
its allies, 579. 
