INDEX. 
Plant enzymes, the study of, particularly 
with relation to oxidation, third report 
on, 108. 
Prummer (W. E.) on seismological in- 
vestigations, 41. 
Plymouth marine laboratory, report on the 
occupation of a table at the, 163. 
*Poniock (Prof. J. A.), some measure- 
ments of the wave-length in air of 
electrical vibrations. 305. 
* Polynesian fish-hooks, by C. Hedley, 536. 
Pors (Prof. W. J.) on the correlation of 
crystalline form with molecular structure, 
109. 
on the study of solubility phenomena, 
—— Address to the Chemical Section, 
322. 
* chemical crystallography, 343. 
Porter (Prof. A. W.) and E. Tazor 
Paris on the scattering of light by 
small and large particles of conducting 
and non-conducting substances, 305. 
*—— and F. Smuvzon on the change of 
thermal conductivity during the 
liquefaction of a metal, 303. 
Portugal, extra-tropical forestry in, by 
D. E. Hutchins, 589. 
Post-jurassic geography of Australia, 
E. C. Andrews on the, and on the 
hypothesis of isostasy, 380. 
Potato scab and its causes, by Prof. T. 
Johnson, 587. 
Povuton (Prof. E. B.) on mimicry in 
Australian insects, 402. 
—— Dr. R. C. L. Perkins’ researches on 
the colour-groups of Hawaiian wasps, 
403. 
Pre-Cambrian, the early, the climatic 
conditions of, by Prof. A. P. Coleman, 
359. 
*Precipitation of inorganic 
forms of, by Prof. B. Moore, 556. 
Precipitin reactions in pathological 
human urines, by Cyril Shellshear, 559. 
Prehistoric civilization of the Western 
Mediterranean, the present state of 
knowledge of the, report on, 235. 
PripxHam (J. T.), William Farrer’s work, | 
methods, and success, 662. 
Primula sinensis, inheritance in certain 
giant races of, by R. P. Gregory, 587. 
PritcuarD (Dr. G. B.) on the age and 
sequence of the Victorian tertiaries, 
374. 
Private wealth of a community, estimate 
of the, and the measure of its un- 
certainty, by G. H. Knibbs, 476. 
Production, the influence of distribution 
on, by Prof. R. F. Irvine, 481. 
Pseudo-monocotyledons, the morphology 
and anatomy of certain, by Miss E. N. 
Thomas and A. J. Davey, 578. 
colloids, 
775 
Pseudo-motor action and recurrent sen- 
sibility, by Prof. W. A. Osborne, 547. 
Punnett (Prof. R. C.) on experiments in 
inheritance, 163. 
*Queensland, Southern, artesian water- 
bearing beds of, the geological re- 
lations of, by E. F. Pittman, 380. 
RavcuirrF (8.), the extraction of radium 
from Australian ores, 342. 
Radiotelegraphic aerials, the capacity 
of, by Prof. G. W. O. Howe, 514. 
Radiotelegraphic investigations, 
report on, 70. 
*Radium, the active deposit of, ex- 
periments on, by E. Wellisch, 303. 
oa the origin and nature of the y rays 
from, by Prof. Sir E. Rutherford, 303. 
from Australian ores, the ex- 
traction of, by 8. Radcliff, 342. 
Railways and motive power, by Prof. 
W. E. Dalby, 499. 
Rainfall, Australian, by H. A. Hunt, 
439. 
—— the ten-inch line of, by Prof. T. 
Cherry, 645. 
Ramssortom (J. W.) on the question of 
fatigue from the economic standpoint, 
175. 
Ramsey Island, Pembrokeshire, the geology 
of, final report on, 111. 
Ranke (Dr. A. O.) on the viscosities 
of the halogens in the gaseous state, 
306. 
Reap (Sir C. H.) on the lake villages in the 
neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 210. 
Red cells of some vertebrates, a com- 
parison of the sizes of the, by Dr. J. B. 
Cleland, 404. 
Rees (Bertha), description of some fossil 
fruits, 579. 
*REICHEL (Sir H. R.), the university and 
the State, 634. 
Rerp (Prof. R. W.) on the teaching of 
anthropology, 235. 
Rei~yy (Joseph) and Prof. G. T. Mor- 
GAN, non-aromatic diazonium salts, 
340. 
interim 
| Religious sociology, a fundamental pro- 
blem of, by Dr. B. Malinowski, 534. 
RENDLE (Dr. A. B.), the origin of species, 
579. 
Residual affinity and co-ordination, by 
Prof. G. T. Morgan and H. W. Moss, 
335. 
Resuscitation in threatened fatalities 
during the administration of anzsthe- 
tics, by Dr. E. H. Embley, 551. 
ReyNO.ps (Prof. 8. H.) on the preparation 
of alist of characteristic fossils, 111. 
