INDEX. 



615 



Gravity at -sea, the deter mi natioti of, 



report on, 549. 

 Gray (Rev. Dr. H. B.) on combining 



literary and scientific subjects in the 



course of general education, 524. 

 Gkay (Prof. Thos.) on fuel economy, 187. 

 Gray (VV.) on the collection of photographs 



of geological interest, 218. 

 Green (Dr. Heber) on the botanical and 



chemical characters of the eucalypts and 



their correlation, 201. 

 Green (Prof. J. A.) on the mental and 



physical factors involved in education, 



307. 

 Greener (T. Y.) on fiiel ecorwmy, 187. 

 GREENinLt, (Sir George) on the calculation 



of mathematical tables, 59. 

 Gregory (Prof. R. A.) on the mental and 



phi/sical factors involved in education, 



307. 



on popular Science lectures, 32G. 



Gregory (R. P.) on experimental sliulicd 



in the physiology of heredity, 306. 

 Griffiths (Principal E. H.) on the work 



of the Corresponding Societies Committee, 



506. 

 *Grinding coal in vacuo, an apparatus 



for, by Dr. P. Phillips Bedson, 376. 

 GiiucHY (G. de) on the exploration of La 



Cotte de St. Breladc, Jersey, 292. 

 Gvest (J. J.) on stress distributions in 



engineering materials, 280. 

 Guild ne, the lower carboniferous flora at, 



report on, 217. 



Haddon (Dr. A. C.) on urchceologicul 



investigations in Malta, 294. 

 * the main cultures of New Guinea, 



468. 

 on the work of the Corresponding 



Societies Committee, 566. 

 Had FIELD (Sir Robert) on fuel economy, 



187. 

 *Hadow (Principal W. H.), science in the 



universities, 525. 

 Hall (Dr. Cuthbert) on the botanical and 



chcmic(d characters of the eucalypts and 



their correlation, 201. 

 Halliburton (Prof. W. D.) on popular 



science lectures, 326. 

 f the effect of pituitary extract on 



the secretion of ccrebro-spinal fluid, 475. 

 Handicraft, the place of, in schools, by 



J. G. Lcgge, 523. 

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



a table at the zoological station at Naples, 



238. 

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



292. 

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



table at the zoological station at Naples, 



238. 



*Hassk (Dr. H. R.) on a jn'oblcm of 

 Boltzmann's and its relation to the 

 theory of radiation, 365. 



*Havelock (Prof. T. H.), propagation of 

 a signal in a dispersive medium, 364. 



*Haverfield (Prof.), the Roman wall, 

 468. 



Hawkes (Leonard), the acid rocks of 

 Iceland, 397. 



Heath (St. G.) on the replacement of men 

 by women in industry, 276. 



Heaton (Howard) on industrial unrest, 

 274. 



Hele-Shaw (Dr. H. S.) on fuel economy, 

 187. 



on popular science lectures, 326. 



Helps (Dr. H.) on fuel economy, 187. 



Henderson (Prof. G. G.), Address to the 

 Chemical Section, 366. 



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

 butions in engineering materials, 280. 



Herdman (Prof. W. A.) on popular science 

 lectures, 326. 



■\ the exploitation of British in-sliore 



tishcTios, 418. 



on the work of the Corresponding 



Societies Committee, 566. 



Heredity, the physiology of, experimental 

 studies in, report on, 306. 



*Heron-Allen (E.) the mussel-fishery 

 and the life of Alcidc d'Orbigny at 

 Esnandcs (La Rochelle), 417. 



*Herring (Prof. P. T.), tlic action of thy- 

 roid on the suprarcnals and heart, 475. 



*Herring, mackerel, and pilchard fisheries 

 off the south-west coasts, the fluctua- 

 tions of the, by Dr. E. C. Jee, 418. 



HicKLENG (Dr. G.) on the excavaiion of 



■ critical sections in the plant-bearing 

 cherts at Rhynie, Aberdeenshire, 206. 



* luiderground contours of the 



Black Mine, 394. 



tHiCKS (Prof. W. M.), Can the frequencies 

 of spectral lines be represented as a 

 function of their order ? 364. 



HiCKSON (Prof. S. J.) 0)1 the occupation 

 of a table at the zoological station at 

 Naples, 238. 



Hill (Prof. M. J. M.) on the calculation 

 of mathenmticul tables, 59. 



Hirst (F. W.) on the effects oj the tear on 

 credit, currency, and finance, 278. 



Hobson (Prof. E. W.) on the calculation of 

 mathematical tables, 59. 



Holden (Col. H. C. L.) on gaseous ex- 

 plosions, 292. 



Holden (Pickup) on industrial unrest, 274. 



HoLDiCH (Col. Sir T. H.) on political 

 boundaries, 241. 



Holland (Prof. Sir T. H.) on the nomen- 

 clature of the carboniferous, permo-car- 

 bonifcrous, and pcrniian rocks of the 

 soictficrn hemisphere, 238. 



