INDEX, 



819 



Barton (Rev. W. J.) on maps for school 

 and university use, 150. 



Bateson (Prof. W.) on experimental 

 studies in the physiology of heredity. 233. 



Bather (Dr. F. A.) on the preparation of a 

 list of stratigraphical names used in the 

 British Isles, 123. 



on the character, work, and main- 

 tenance of museums, 202. 



Batho (Prof. Cyril), the calculation of 

 torsion stresses in framed structures 

 and thin-walled prisms, 6+9. 



Bayliss (Prof. W. M.), Address to the 

 Physiological Section, 679. 



the mode of action of urease, 687. 



Bayly (P. G. W.) on non-aromatic dia- 

 zonium salts, 95. 



Behaviourism, by Dr. A. Robinson, 689. 



Belmullet whaling station, the biological 

 problems incidentcd to the, report on, 

 124. 



Bevan (Rev. J. 0.) on the work of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 781. 



BiCKEESTETH (Miss M. E.) on the de- 

 velopment of some mental capacities in 

 children from five to fiiteen years of 

 age, 692. 



Bidder (G. P.) on the occupation of a table 

 at the zoological station at Naples, 148. 



* Bilharzia, the metamorphosis of, by 

 Lt.-Col. R. T. Leiper, 477. 



Blackman (Prof. F. F.) on the influence of 

 varying percentages of oxygen and of 

 various atmospheric pressures upon geo- 

 tropic and heliotropic irritability and 

 curvature, 231. 



on experimental studies in the physio- 

 logy of heredity, 233. 



*Blackwell (Miss E. M.), stomata on 

 hypogeal cotyledons, 730. 



Bolton (H.) on the character, work, and 

 maintenance of museums, 262. 



Bone (Prof. W. A.) on gaseous explosions, 

 158. 



Address to the Chemical Section, 368. 



* gaseous combustion at high pres- 

 sures, 387. 



* the Bone-Callendar-Yates bolo- 

 meter, 393. 



*Bone-Callendar- Yates bolometer, the, 

 by Prof. W. A. Bone, 393. 



Bonne Y (Rev. Prof. T. G.) on the North- 

 western region of Charnwood Forest, 

 423. 



BosANQUET (Prof. R. C.) on excavations 

 on Roman sites in Britain, 200. 



Botanical Section, Address by Prof. W. II. 



Lang to the, 701. 

 BoTiiAMLEY (C. H.) on the influence of 



school-books upon eyesight, 234. 

 BoTTOMLEY (Prof. W. B.), the formation 

 of auximones from nitrogenous organic 

 substances, 728. 



BouLTON (Prof. W. S.) on the preparation 



of a list of characteristic fossils, 116. 

 on the excavation of critical sections 



in the lower palceozoic rocks of England 



and Wales, 117. • 

 Bower (Prof. F. 0.) on the botanical and 



chemical characters of the eucalypis and 



their correlation, 97. 

 on the investigation of the biology of 



the AbroUws Islands, 148. 



on the occupation of a table at the zoo- 



logical station at Naples, 148. 



on the renting of Cinchona botanic 



station in Jamaica, 229. 



on the influence of varying percen- 

 tages of oxygen and of various atmo- 

 spheric pressures upon geotropic and 

 heliotropic irritability and curvature, 

 231. 



* the phyletic arrangement of the 



filicales, with special regard to the dip- 

 terids and pteridece, 726. 



Boys (C. Vernon) on seismological in- 

 vestigations, 52. 



Bbabrook (Sir E.) on the work of the Cor- 

 responding Societies Committee, 781. 



*Bragg (Prof. W. H. and W. L.), X-rays 

 and crystal structure. 367. 



Beigg (T. H.), recent improvements in the 

 traction of vehicles, 648. 



Brines in Manitoba, the corrosive action 

 of certain, by Prof. R. C. Wallace, 427. 



Bronze age implements, the distribution of, 

 report on, 199. 



BROu^t^ (Dr. R. N. Rudmose) on maps for 

 sdiool and university use, 150. 



Spitsbergen before the war, 492. 



BEO^VN (Sidney G.) on radiotelegraphic 

 investigations, 39. 



*Brown (Dr. T. Graham), the effect of 

 removal of the post-central gyri on the 

 movements of the anthropoid ape, 687. 



Browne (Rev. H.) on the character, work, 

 and maintenance of muscutns, 262. 



Buchanan (Dr. Florence) on the structure 

 and function of the mammalian heart, 

 226. 



BucKM.\STEE (C.) on the character, tcork, 

 and maintenance of museums, 262. 



BuLLEiD (A.) on the lake villages in the 

 neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 170. 



BuLLEE (Prof. A. H. R.) on the renting of 

 Cincliona botanic station in Jamaica, 

 229. 



on spore discharge in the uredineoe 



and hymenomycetes, 730. 

 fBurrinjuck dam, the, and the Murrum- 

 bidgee irrigation area, by J. McFarlane, 

 490. 

 Burst ALL (Prof. F. W.) on gaseous explo- 

 sions, 158. 

 Burt (Cyril), general and specific factors 

 underlying the jMimary emotions, 694. 



3 G 2 



