818 



INDEX. 



Animism and magic, the relations be- 

 tween, by Carveth Read, 690. 



Anthropological Section, Address by Dr. 

 C. G. Seligman to the, 651. 



Anthropologique application, une, a I'art 

 militaire, by Prof. E. Manouvrier, 671. 



Anthropometric investigations in Cyprus, 

 report on, 193. 



Antiquity of man, geological evidence in 

 Britain as to the, by Prof. W. Boyd 

 Dawkins, 421. 



Appendix vermiformis in monotremes 

 and marsupials, the, on the biology of, 

 by Dr. W. C. Mackenzie, 472. 



Aptian flora of Britain, the : early an- 

 gio-perms and their contemporaries, 

 by Dr. Marie C. Stopes, 720. 



Archcejlogical investigations in Malta, re- 

 port on, 208. 



Archee (Prof. R. L.) on maps for school 

 and university use, 150. 



*ArE:inine and creatine formation, by 

 Prof. W. H. Thompson, 688. 



Armstrong (E. C. R.) on the distribution 

 of bronze age implements, 199. 



ARM.STRONG (Dr. E. F.) on the study of 

 plant enzymes, 85. 



Armstrong (Prof. H. E.) on dynamic 

 isomerism, 81. 



on the study of plant enzymes, 85. 



on the correlation of crystalline form 



with molecular structure, 85. 



on the botanical and chemical charac- 



ters of the euccdypts and their correlation, 

 97. 

 Aromatic nitroamines and allied sub- 

 stances, the transformation of, and its 

 relation to substitution in benzene deriva- 

 tives, report on, 82. 



AsAKAWA (Prof. G.) and Prof. J. E. Peta- 

 VEL, experimental investigation of the 

 thermal efficiency of a gas engine, 

 637. 



Ash (F. W.) on secondary sex characters 

 as characters of abandoned function, 

 471. 



on the insufficiency of the ' hor- 

 mone ' theory, 471. 



AsHBY (Dr. T.) on excavations on Roman 

 sites in Britain, 200. 



on archceologiccd investigations in 



Malta, 208. 



on excavations at Xrobb il Qhargin, 



208. 



Ash WORTH (Dr. J. H.) on the investigation \ 

 of the biology of the Abrolhos Islands, 148. 



-■ on the occupation of a table at the zoo- 

 logical .station at Naples, 148. 



t on larvse of Lingida and Pelagodis- 



cus collected in the Red Sea and Indian 

 Ocean, 475. | 



ASTLEY (Rev. H. J. Dukinfield), early 

 man in East Anglia, 677. i 



*Atomic theory, diagrams used by Dalton 

 in illustrating his, exhibition of, 386. 



AuDEN (Dr. G. A.) on the age of stone 

 circles, 174. 



on the distribution of bronze age im- 

 plements, 199. 



on the influence of school-books upon 



eyesight, 234. 



♦Australia, on zoological collecting in, in 

 1914, by Prof. A. Dendy, 475. 



* on insects collected in, by Prof. 



E. B. Poulton, 475. 



* the discovery of, by H. Yule Old- 

 ham. 490. 



A ustralian cycadacea, report on. 232. 



Australian fossil plants, report of the Com- 

 mittee appointed to cut sections of, 231. 



Auximones, the formation of, from nitro- 

 genous organic substances, by Prof. 

 W. B. Bottomley, 728. 



Avebury excavations, 1914, the, by H. 

 St. G. Gray, 176. 



AvERY (D.) on the influence of locather con- 

 ditions on the anwunts of nitrogen acids 

 in the rainfall and atmosphere of Aus- 

 tralia, 87. 



Bainbridge (Prof.) on the question of 

 fatigue from the economic standpoint, 

 283. 



Baker (R. T.) on the botanical and chemi- 

 cal characters of the eucalypts and their 

 correlation, 97. 



Baker (Dr. Sarah M.) on the liquid pres- 

 sure theory of muscular contraction, 

 688. 



on the liquid pressur'e theory of the 



circulation of sap in plants, 722. 



Balfour (Henry) on the lake villages in the 

 neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 170. 



on the age of stone circles, 174. 



on the exploration of La Cotte de St. 



Brelade, Jersey, 194. 



on the distribution of bronze age im- 



plements, 199. 



on archaeological investigations in 



Malta, 208. 



Balls (W. Lawrence), the application of 

 science to the cotton industry, 721. 



♦Barker (Miss M.) and Prof. P. Geddes, 

 the study of cities, 494. 



Barlow (W.) on the correlation of crystal- 

 line form ivith malecidar structure, 85. 



Barnsley seam of coal in the Yorkshue 

 coalfield, the underground contours of 

 the. Prof. W. G. Fearnsides on, 424. 



Bare (Prof. A.) on stress distributions in 

 engineering materials, 159. 



Barrington (R. M.) on the biologiccd pro- 

 blems incidental to the Belmullet whaling 

 station, 124. 



