INDEX. 
Tuomas (H. Hamshaw) on the character, 
work, and maintenance of museums, 249. 
Tuomeson (Prof. P.) on the teaching of 
anthropology, 235. 
THomeson (Prof. 8. P.) on radiotele- 
graphic investigations, 70. 
THompson (Mrs. W. H.) on the ductless 
glands, 237. 
THomson (Hedley J.), a transmission 
system suitable for heavy internal 
combustion locomotives, 499. 
THornToN (Prof. W. M.), the lost 
pressure in gaseous explosions, 513. 
—— the limiting conditions for the 
safe use of electricity in coal mining, 
513. 
*Thyroid, the influence of the, upon the 
activity of the suprarenals and pitui- 
tary body, by Prof. P. T. Herring, 558. 
TippEmAN (R. H.) on the erratic blocks of 
the British Isles, 111. 
TinrKens (W. H.), Central Australia and 
its possibilities, 452. 
Titiyarp (R. J.) on the emergence of the 
nymph of anax papuensis (Burm) 
from the egg, 424. 
Tims (Dr. H. W. M.) on the biological | 
problems incidental lo the Belmullet 
whaling station, 125. 
—— on experiments in inheritance, 163. 
Totemism in Australia, varieties of, 
by A. R. Brown, 532. 
Town planning, the economics of, by | 
J. S. Nettlefold, 468. 
—— in relation to the community, by ) 
W. R. Davidge, 465. 
—— in relation to housing and health, 
by W. R. Davidge, 480. 
*—— sociological aspects of, by J. D. 
Fitzgerald, 478. 
Robertson, 478. 
and good housing conditions, the 
effect of, on social and economic well- 
being, 468. 
*Training, the general aims of, by Prof. 
J. J. Findlay, 629. 
the problem of, by Prof. J. A. 
Green, 629. 
Training of the teacher, the, by Dr. John 
Smyth, 628. 
Training of teachers in New South 
Wales, Prof. A. Mackie on the, 629. 
*, 
Transmission system suitable for heavy | 
internal combustion locomotives, a, 
by H. J. Thomson, 499. 
TREMEARNE (Major A. J. N.) on the 
production of certified copies of Hausa 
manuscripts, 234, 
—— Bori exorcism, fortune-telling, and 
invocation, 528. 
Trias of the Western Midlands, the fauna 
and flora of the, report on, 114. 
the health aspect of, by Dr. John | 
779 
Trouton (Prof. F. T.), Address to the 
Mathematical and Physical Section, 
285. 
Trypanosomes, the development of, in 
the invertebrate host, by Prof. E. A. 
Minchin, 404. 
TURNER (Frederick), a botanical survey 
of North-east New South Wales, 589. 
TuRNER (Prof. H. H.) on seismological 
investigations, 41. 
——— on establishing a solar observatory 
in Australia, 74. 
*—— discontinuities in meteorological 
phenomena, 304. 
on the work of the Corresponding 
Societies Committee, 722. 
TwentyMan (A. E.) on the mental and 
physical factors involved in education, 
248. 
*Ultra-violet light, the action of, on 
solutions of organic substances, by 
Prof. B. Moore, 556. 
*University, the, and the school, by 
Prof. J. A. Green, 634. 
and the State, by Sir H. R. Reichel, 
4, 
*, 
i 
by P. Board, 634. 
Upper atmosphere, the investigation of the, 
thirteenth report on, 69. 
Upper old red sandstone of Dura Den, 
report on the, 116. 
—— the fossil fishes from, Dr. A. Smith 
Woodward on, 122. 
Vapour pressures, a new method for 
the determination of, and an examina- 
tion of a source of error in certain 
dynamical methods, by F. H. Camp- 
bell, 337. 
*Variety testing, by Prof. T. B. Wood, 
662. 
VauGuHan (Dr. A.) on the preparation of 
a list of characteristic fossils, 111. 
*—— the age of the permo-carboni- 
ferous glacial beds, 378. 
Vegetation on the coast in the neighbour- 
hood of Adelaide, types of, by Prof. 
T. G. B. Osborn, 584. 
*Venom of some Australian snakes, the 
action of the, on the corpuscles of some 
bloods, by Prof. D. A. Welsh and Dr. 
H. G. Chapman, 558. 
Victoria, the central highlands and 
“main divide’ of, by T. S. Hart, 443. 
—— the evolution of, during the kaino- 
zoic period, by D. J. Mahony, 376. 
the geology of, by Prof. E. W. 
Skeats, 358. 
—— the tertiary alkali rocks of, Prof. 
E. W. Skeats on, 360. 
* 
