764 
Duntor (Dr. A.) on the exploration of 
La Cotte de St. Brelade, Jersey, 230. 
*Dunstan (S.), the geological relations 
of the artesian water-bearing beds of 
Southern Queensland, 380. 
Dura Den, the wpper old red sandstone 
of, report on, 116. 
—— the fossil fishes from, Dr. A. Smith 
Woodward on, 122. 
Du Torr (A. L.) on the physiography of 
arid lands, 367. 
DwerryHouseE (Dr. A. R.) on the erratic 
blocks of the British Isles, 111. 
—— on the preparation of a list of charac- 
teristic fossils, 111. 
Dynamic increment, the, of a single | 
rolling load on a supported beam, by 
Prof. H. Chatley, 502. 
Dynamic isomerism, report on, 102. 
Dyson (Dr. F. W.) on seismological in- 
vestigations, 41. 
—— on establishing a solar observatory 
tn Australia, 74. 
*___ the distribution in space of the 
stars near the North Pole, 303. 
*Early stone age culture, some exten- 
sions of the, by H. Balfour, 527. 
*Earthquake origins of the S. W. Pacific, 
a map of the principal, by G. Hogben, 
304. 
Eastern Australian 
its effect on the native flora, by R. H. 
Cambage, 448. 
Eccues (Dr. W. H.) on radiotelegraphic 
investigations, 70. 
*Echinoderm larve, 
T. Steel, 407. 
Economic evolution, some thoughts on, 
by Prof. H. O. Meredith, 482. 
Economic ideal, the, by Prof. S. 
Chapman, 488. 
Economic Science and Statistics, Address 
to the Section of, by Prof. E. C. K. 
Gonner, 453. 
studies by 
on, 
J. 
Eporneton (Prof. A. §S.) on radio- 
telegraphic investigations, 70. 
—— on establishing a solar observatory 
tn Australia, 74. 
*—__ the oblate shape of the stellar 
system, 304. 
Education, the mental and physical factors 
involved in, report on, 248. 
Educational pioneering (Queensland), by 
J. D. Story, 634. 
Educational Section, Address by Prof. 
J. Perry to the, 592. 
—— Address by Prof. H. E. Armstrong 
to the, 608. 
Eacar (W. D.) on the influence of school 
books upon eyesight, 248. 
topography and — 
| —— on anesthetics, 550. 
. INDEX. 
Eecar (W. D.), mathematics and science 
as part of a liberal education, 623. 
Eeaueston (F. W.), the Australian 
democracy and its economic problems, 
469. 
Egypt, the ancient inhabitants of, by 
Prof. G. Elliot Smith, 534. 
Egyptians, the ancient, the 
characters of, report on, 212. 
Elasticity, the change in the modulus 
of, and of other properties of metals 
with temperature, by Prof. F. C. Lea 
and O. H. Crowther, 502. 
Electric railways, the metropolitan, 
proposed for Sydney, by J. J. C. 
Bradfield, 507. 
Electricity in coal mining, the limiting 
conditions for the safe use of, by 
Prof. W. M. Thornton, 513. 
*Flectrification, the artificial, of the 
atmosphere, by Sir O. Lodge, 501. 
*Elements, the natural classification 
of the, a device for the representation 
of, by Prof. Orme Masson, 336. 
*Ellipsoidal shells, the attractions of, 
by Prof. A. Gray, 304. 
physical 
| ELMORE (J. L.), exhibition of drawings 
and photographs of South African 
bushmen, their occupations and modes 
of life, 536. 
Emptey (Dr. E. H.), evidence of co- 
ordinate action in the cireulatory 
system, 547. 
resuscitation in threatened fatalities 
during the administration of general 
anesthetic agents, 551. 
Employment for juveniles, the selection 
of, by Mrs. C. M. Meredith, 485. 
Engineering Section, Address by Prof. 
E. G. Coker to the, 490. 
*Enricut (W. G.), exhibition of an 
Australian aboriginal stone toma- 
hawk and of drawings by an aboriginal, 
536. 
| Erratic blocks of the British Isles, report 
Economics at Oxford, by Sidney Ball, 472. | 
on the, 111. 
ErRskine-Mcurray (Dr.) 
graphic investigations, 70. 
*ETHERIDGE (R.), the distribution of 
the cvlindro-conicai stones of Western 
New South Wales, 535. 
*__ the ethnological collections of the 
Australian Museum, with special re- 
ference to the Bismarck Archipelago 
and New Guinea, 536. 
*—— exhibition of teeth of the dingo 
from the breccia of the Wellington 
Caves, New South Wales, 536. 
*Ethnological collections of the Aus- 
tralian Museum, the, with special 
reference to the Bismarck Archipelago 
and New Guinea, by R. Etheridge, 536. 
on radiotele- 
