836 



INDEX. 



Webb (W. Mark) on the work of the Corre- 

 sponding Societies Committee, 781. 



Webster (Prof. A. G.) on the calculation 

 of mathematical tables, 27. 



Weiss (Prof. F. E.) on the renting of Cin- 

 chona botanic station in Jamaica, 229. 



on the character, work, and mainte- 

 nance of museums, 262. 



*Weiss (Prof. Pierre), new views of mag- 

 netism, 367. 



Wells (A. K.) and Dr. A. H. Cos, the 

 Ordovician sequence in the Cader Idris 

 district (Merioneth). 424. 



Western shore line in England and Wales, 

 shift of the, during the Avonian period, 

 by Dr. A. Vaughan, 429. 



Westralia, the central lake^ of. the rela- 

 tions of, by Prof. J. W. Gregory, 490. 



Whipple (F. J. W.), the mechanism of 

 cyclones, 367. 



Whitaker (W.) on the work of the Corre- 

 sponiin-j Societies Committee, 781. 



White (Dr.C. Powell), regeneration of the 

 tail in the common lizard after auto- 

 tomy, 472. 



* the presence of copper in animal 



and vegetable tissues, 688. 



White (J. A.), the method and content 

 of history as a subject of school study, 

 743. 



White (Dr. Jessie) on the character, work, 

 and maintenance of museums, 262. 



♦Whitehead (Prof. A. N.), time, space, 

 and relativity, 366. 



WiBBERLEY (T.), economics of continuous 

 cropping, 774. 



Willis (Dr. J. G.), fui-ther deductions 

 from the figm-ea of rarity of the Ceylon 

 flora. 726. 



WiLMOEE (Dr. Albert), the carboniferous 

 limestone zones of N.E. Lancashire, 

 427. 



Wilson (Prot. Ernest), exposure tests of 

 light aluminium alloys, 647. 



Wilson (J. S.) on stress distributions in 

 engineering materials, 159. 



Wilson (Dr. M.), the life history and 

 cytology of Tuburcinia primulicola 

 Rosti-up, 730. 



Wilson (William), the musk {Mimuiui 

 moschatus L.) in Scotland, 730. 

 I WiMPERTS (H. E.) on gaseous explosions, 

 I 158. 



Women's education, by Miss Haldane, 

 752. 

 j Wood (A. B.), the military training of 

 I youth in schools, 749. 



♦Wood (Prof. T. B.), scientific aid to the 

 stock-feeder, 772. 



Woods (H.) on the preparation of a list of 

 characteristic fossils, 116. 



Woodward (Dr. A. Smith) on the pre- 

 paration of a list of characteristic fossils, 

 116. 



on the old red sandstone rocks of Kil- 



torcan, Ireland, 117. 



071 the nomenclator animalium genera 



et sub-genera, 147. 



Woolnoitgh (Prof. W. G.) on the nomen- 

 clature of the carboniferous, pernw-car- 

 boniferous, and permian rocks of tht 

 southern hemisphere, 263. 



Wynne (Prof. W. P.) on the correlation of 

 crystalline form with molecular structure, 

 85. 



*X-rays and crystal structure, by Prof. 



W. H. Bragg and W. L. Bragg, 367. 

 Xrobb il Ohargin, excavations at, by Dr. T. 



Ashby, 208. 



Yapp (Prof. R. H.) on the renting of Cin- 

 chona botanic station in Jamaica, 229. 



on the vegetation of Ditcham Park, 



Hampshire, 232. 



YoTTNG (Prof. Sydney) on dynamic iso- 

 1 merism, 81. 



♦Zoological collecting in Australia im 



1914, by Prof. A. Dendy, 475. 

 Zoological Section, Address by Prof. E. A. 



Minchin to the, 437. 

 Zoological station at Naples, report on tht 



occupation of a table at the, 148. 

 Zygopteris, an Australian, Mrs. Edith M. 



Osborn on, 727. 



