760 
Bevan (Rev. J. O.) on the work of the 
Corresponding Societies Committee, 722. 
BippEr (G. P.) on the occupation of a 
table at the zoological station at Naples, 
162. 
Binary canon, the disposal of copies of 
the, report on, 102. 
*Binocular combination of kinemato- 
graph pictures, report on the, 549. 
Biochemical significance of phosphorus, 
the, by Miss H. Kincaid, 554. 
Buackman (Prof. F. F.) on experimental 
studies in the physiology of heredity, 245. 
*Boarp (P.), the university and the 
State, 634. 
Bouton (H.) on the upper old red sand- 
stone of Dura Den, 116. 
—— on the character, work, and main- 
tenance of museums, 249. 
Bonp (C. I.) on the sex dimorphism 
and secondary sex characters in some 
abnormal begonia flowers, and on the 
evolution of the moncecious condition 
in plants, 572. 
Bons (Prof. W. A.) on gaseous explosions, 
177. : 
Bonney (Dr. T. G.) on the erratic blocks 
of the British Isles, 111. 
Boots (J.) on a collection of Australian | 
frogs, 398. 
Bori exorcism, fortune-telling, and in- 
vocation, by Major A. J. N. Tremearne, 
528. 
Bossiwa scolopendria (Sm.), the xero- 
phytic characters of, A. G. Hamilton 
on, 586. 
Botanical Section, Address 
F. O. Bower to the, 560. 
Botanical survey of North-east New 
South Wales, a, by F. Turner, 589. 
*Botany, the teaching of, by Miss L. J. 
Clarke, 627. 
Botuamuey (C. H.) on the influence of 
school books upon eyesight, 248. 
Bourton (Prof. W. 8.) on the preparation 
of a list of characteristic fossils, 111. 
—— on the excavation of critical sections 
in the lower paleozoic rocks of England 
and Wales, 115. 
Bower (Prof. F. 0.) on the renting of 
Cinchona botanic station in Jamaica, 
248. 
—— Address to the Botanical Section, 
560. 
modern derivatives of the mato- 
nioid ferns, 576. 
Boys (C. Vernon) on seismological in- 
vestigations, 41. 
BRaABROoK (Sir E.) on the mental and 
physical factors involved in education, 
248. 
on the work of the Corresponding 
Societies Committee, 722. 
by Prof. 
INDEX. 
BRADFIELD (J. J. C.), the metropolitan 
electric railways proposed for Sydney, 
507. 
BRADLEY (Burton) on the symbiotic 
activities of coliform and other organ- 
isms on media containmg carbo- 
hydrates and allied substances, 556. 
Brain, the relations of the inner surface 
of the cranial wall to the, Prof. J. 
Symington on, 528. 
*Brain of primitive man, the, by Prof. 
G. Elliot Smith, 528. 
Briees (Dr. Lyman J.), dry-farming 
investigations in the United States, 263. 
*British birds, the feeding habits of, sixth 
report on, 400. 
Brown (A. R.), varieties of totemism 
in Australia, 532. 
Brown (Prof. E. W.), Address to the 
Mathematical and Physical Section, 
311. 
Brown (Rev. Dr. George), some nature 
myths from Samoa, 533. 
Brown (Sidney G.) on radiotelegraphic 
investigations, 70. 
Brown (Dr. W.) on the mental and physical 
factors involved in education, 248. 
Bruce (Dr. W. S.) on the position of the 
Antarctic whaling industry, 123. 
Bryce (Prof. T. H.) on the distribution 
of artificial islands in the lochs of the 
Highlands of Scotland, 229. 
—— on the teaching of anthropology, 235. 
Buckmaster (C. A.), State aid for 
science: a retrospect, 623. 
Butwer (Prof. RB.) on the renting of Cin- 
chona botanic station in Jamaica, 248. 
Bute (A.) on the lake villages in the 
neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 210. 
Burrows (G. J.), the inversion of cane- 
sugar by acids in water-alcohol solu- 
tions, 342. 
Burstauu (Prof. F. W.) on gaseous ex- 
plosions, 177. 
Cappury (E.) on the question of fatigue 
from the economic standpoint, 175. 
CALLENDAR (Prof. H. L.) on gaseous 
explosions, 177. 
Catman (Dr. W. T.) on the position of 
the Antarctic whaling industry, 123. 
Calorimetric observations on man in 
health and in febrile conditions, report 
on, 238. 
CaMBAGE (R. H.), Eastern Australian 
topography and its effect on the 
native flora, 448. 
——on the evolution of the genus 
eucalyptus, 582. 
Cameron (A. T.) on the effect of low 
temperature on cold-blooded animals, 
241. 
