INDEX. 



825 



•Graham (James), education in its relation 

 to industry, 756. 



Gravity at sea, the determination of, inte- 

 rim report on, 48. 



Gray (E.) on the character, work, and 

 maintenance of mnsenms. 262. 



■Gray (H. St. G.) on the lake villages in the 

 neighbourhood of Glastonbury, 170. 



the Avebury excavations, 1914, 176. 



Gray (M. H.) 07i seismological investiga- 

 tions, 52. 

 ■Greek element, the. in Asia Minor, by 



R. M. Dawkins, 671. 

 •Green (Dr. Heber) on the chemical in- 

 vestigation of natural plant products of 

 Victoria, 86. 



on the botanical and chemical charac- 

 ters of the eucalypts and their correla- 

 tion, 97. 



Green (Prof. J. A.) on the character, work, 

 and maintenance of museums, 262. 



Green (Rev. W. S.) on the biological pro- 

 blems incidental to the Belmullet whaling 

 station, 124. 



Greenrill (Sir George) on the calculation 

 of mathematiccd tables, 27. 



Gregory (Prof. J. W.) on the preparation 

 of a list of characteristic fossils, 116. 



— — the relations of the central lakes of 

 Westralia, 490. 



Gregory (Prof. R. A.) on the influence of 

 school-books upon eyesight, 234. 



Gregory (R. P.) on experimental studies 

 in the physiology of heredity, 233. 



Griffiths (Principal E. H.) on univer- 

 sity scholarships, exhibitions, and bur- 

 saries, 238. 



on the work of the Corresponding 



Societies Committee, 781. 



Gruchy (G. de) on the exploration of La 

 Cotte de St. Brelade, Jersey, 194. 



Guest (J. J.) on stress distributions in 

 engineering materials, 159. 



GuvoT (Yves), the ctTect of the war on 

 finance and currency, 618. 



*G}Ti, the post-central, the effect of 

 removal of, on the movements of the 

 anthropoid ape, 687. 



Haddon (Dr. A. C.) on anthropometric 



investigations in Cyprus, 193. 

 on archceological investigations in 



Malta, 208. 

 on the character, work, and mainte- 



nance of nuiseums, 262. 

 on the work of the Corresponding 



Societies Committee, 78K 

 JHaigh (Dr. B. P.) on alternating stress 



tests of a sample of mild steel, 163. 

 Haldane (Miss), women's education, 



752. 



Hall (A. D.) on the study of plant enzymes, 

 85. 



Hall (Dr. Cuthbert) on the botanical and 

 chemical characters of the eucalypts and 

 their correlation, 97. 



*Halnan (E. T.), new feeding-stuffs, 770. 



*Hambleton (Dr. G. W.), chest types 

 in man in relation to disease, 678. 



Hamilton (J. Erik) 07i the biclogical pro- 

 blems incidental to the Belmullet whaling 

 station, 124. 



♦Harden (Prof. A.) and Dr. H. F. 

 Coward, diagrams used by Dalton in 

 illustrating his atomic theorj', 386. 



Hardy (G. H.), prime numbers, 350. 



Hardy (Dr. W. B.) on the occupation of 

 a table at the zoological station at Naples, 

 148. 



Harker (Dr. J. A.) on gaseous explosions, 

 158. 



Harman (N. B.) on the influence of school- 

 books upon eyesight, 234. 



Harmer (Dr. S. F.) on the occupation of a 

 table at the zoological station at Naples, 

 148. 



on the character, work, and tnainte- 



nance of museums, 262. 



Harrison (H. S.) on the distribution of 

 bronze age implements, 199. 



on the character, work, and main- 

 tenance of museums, 262. 



Harrison (Launcelot), the relation of 

 the phylogenv of the parasite to that 

 of the host, 476. 



Hartog (Prof . Marcus) on university scho- 

 larships, exhibitions, and bursaries, 238. 



the discession of the chi-omosomea 



and mitokinetism, 470. 



Heaensuaw (Prof. F. C. J.), the place of 

 history iu education, 740. 



Heating of iron, the, when magnetised at 

 very high frequencies, by N. W. Mc- 

 Lachlan, 644. 



Hele-Shaw (Dr. H. S.), Address to the 

 Engineering Section, 620. 



Henderson (Prof. J. B.) on stress distri- 

 butions in engineering materials, 159. 



*Hendrick (Prof. James), the manurial 

 situation and its difficulties, 770. 



the composition and uses of certain 



seaweeds, 770. 



Henry (Prof. Paul) on the nitrile of 

 vinylacetic acid, 386. 



Herdman (Prof. W. A.) on the biological 

 problems incidental to the Belmullet 

 wJialing station, 124. 



on the investigation of the biology of 



the Abrolhos Islands, 148. 



on the proposed survey of the natural 



history of the Isle of Man, 149. 



• and Andrew Scott, the plankton 



collected during the journey to Aus- 

 tralia and back in 1914, 473. 



