INDEX. 
*CaMERON (Dr. S. S.), the results of 
milk and dairy supervision in Vic- 
toria, 653. 
CAMPBELL (F. H.), a new method for 
the determination of vapour pressures, 
and an examination of a source of | 
error in certain dynamical methods, 
337. 
*CAMPBELL (W. D.), a plea for systematic 
ethnological research in Australia, 534. 
Canberra plan, the, by W. B. Griffin, 
500. 
Cane-sugar, the inversion of, by acids 
in water-alcohol solutions, by G. J. 
Burrows, 342. 
Capillary power of soils, the, by Dr. 
Heber Green, 647. 
*Carbon are, the pressure upon the 
poles of a, by Prof. W. G. Duffield, 
304. 
*CarsLAw (Prof. H.S.), the Green’s func- 
tion for the equation 9 ?u-+-k?u = 0, 308. 
CaRrTER (W. Lower) on the erratic blocks 
of the British Isles, 111. 
—— on the preparation of a list of charac- 
teristic fossils, 111. 
Casuarina and its allies, the systematic 
position of, by Dr. Emily M. Berridge, 
579. 
Cattle, the estimation of condition in, 
by J. A. Murray, 669. 
Cave (C. J. P.) on the investigation of the 
upper atmosphere, 69. 
Central Australia and its possibilities, 
by W. H. Tietkens, 452. 
Central highlands, the, and ‘ main 
divide’ of Victoria, by T. S. Hart, 443. 
Central neural response to peripheral 
neural distortion, by Prof. W. A. 
Osborne and B. Kilvington, 547. 
*Cerebro-spinal fluid, the physiology 
of, by Profs. W. E. Dixon and W. D. 
Halliburton, 547. 
CHAPMAN (D. L.) on gaseous explosions, 
177. 
CHapmMAN (Frederick) on the age and 
sequence of the tertiary strata of 
South-Eastern Australia, 371. 
Cuapman (Dr. H. G.) on the freezing- 
point of the laked red blood corpuscles 
of man and some domesticated animals, 
559. 
——and J. M. Perris, the action of 
the juice of Euphorbia peplus on a 
photographic plate, 303. 
—— —— the distribution of nitrogen 
in the seeds of Acacia Pycnantha, 666. 
and Prof. D. A. WELSH, the action 
of the venom of some Australian 
snakes on the corpuscles of some 
bloods, 558. 
Cuarman (Prof. S, J.), the economic 
ideal, 488. 
* 
761 
Characteristic fossils, the preparation of a 
list of, second interim report on, 11). 
*Charnwood rocks, the microscopical and 
chemical composition of the, report on, 
379. 
CuATLey (Prof. H.), the dynamic incre- 
ment of a single rolling load on a 
supported beam, 502. 
Cuaunpy (T. W.), symbolic solution of 
linear partial differential equations 
of the second order, 306. 
*Chemical crystallography, by Prof. 
W. J. Pope, 343. 
Chemical Section, Address by Prof. 
W. J. Pope to the, 322. 
Cusrry (Prof. Thomas), the ten-inch 
line of rainfall, 645. 
Chloroform poisoning, a case of delayed, 
Prof. R. F. C. Leith on, 552. 
CurEE (Dr. C.) on radiotelegraphic in- 
vestigations, 70. 
—— on stress distributions in engineering 
materials, 200. 
Cinchona botanic station in 
the renting of, report on, 248. 
Circulatory system, evidence of co- 
ordinate action in the, by Dr. E. H. 
Embley, 547. 
*CLARKE (Miss L. J.), the teaching of 
botany, 627. 
CLELAND (Dr. J. Burton), a comparison 
of the sizes of the red cells of some 
vertebrates, 404. 
——on some Australian hzematozoa, 
405. 
—— the spores of basidiomycetes, 586. 
CLERK (Dr. Dugald) on gaseous explo- 
sions, 177. 
Climate from the physiological point 
of view, by Prof. W. A. Osborne, 
555. 
*Climate in northern temperate and 
arctic zones during the latest pleisto- 
cene age, the, by Prof. Gunnar Anders- 
son, 580. 
Climatic conditions of the early pre- 
Cambrian, the, by Prof. A. P. Coleman, 
359. 
Cruse (Dr. J. A.) on the character, work, 
and maintenance of museums, 249. 
Coal-fields of Pennsylvania, the struc- 
tural features of the, and their in- 
fluence on the origin of hard coal, by 
Prof. E. S. Moore, 381. 
CosppoLp (E. 8.) on the excavation of 
critical sections in the lower paleozoic 
rocks of England and Wales, 115. 
Coxer (Prof. E. G.) on gaseous explosions, 
177. 
—— on stress distributions in engineering 
materials, 200. 
—— Address to the Engineering Sec- 
tion, 490. 
Jamaica, 
