442 



INDEX. 



NuNN (Prof. T. P.), Tendency towards 



individual education, 378. 

 NuTTALL (Prof. G. H.), Precipitive 



reactions as means of determining 



systematic relationships in animals and 



plants, *376. 



Oats, varieties of, bj' C. B. V. Marquand, 

 *380. 



Ocean, discussion on need for scientific 

 investigation of the, *359, t381. 



Ogilvie (Sir F.), in discussion on need 

 for scientific investigation of the ocean, 

 *359, t381. 



Old Red Sandstone of Mitcheldean district, 

 Gloucestershire, by Dr. T. F. Sibly, 356. 



Oligochseta, Polyphyletic origin of genera 

 in, . . ., by Prof. J. Stephenson, *358. 



Onslow (Hon. H.), on inheritancA of 

 colour in Lepidoptera, 261. 



Onslow (Hon. Mrs.), Biochemistry and 

 systematic relationship in the plant 

 kingdom, 374, t382. 



Orchard survey of west of England, by 

 Capt. R. Wellington, *379. 



Ordoviceo-Valentian succession in north- 

 east Pembrokeshire and north Car- 

 marthenshire, by D. C. Evans, *358. 



Ostrich, a caudal vesicle and Reissner's 

 fibre in the, by Prof. J. E. Duerden, 

 *359. 



Pineal eye in, by Prof. J. E. 



Duerden, *359, t381. 



Ovambo, The, by Prof. E. H. L. Schwarz, 

 *366. 



Owens (Dr. J. S.), Removal of reefs in 

 Rio Guadiana, 365, fSSl. 



OxLEY (Dr. A. E.), Magnetism and struc- 

 ture of the atom, *353, t380. 



Page (Capt. H. J.), Green manuring of 



light soils, *380, t383. 

 Paraguay, . . . plant ecology and biology 



in, by Prof. R. Chodat, *372, t382. 

 Paesons (Prof. F. G.), Modern Londoner 



and the long barrow man, *366. 

 Partition of load in riveted joints, bj' 



Dr. C. Batho, *364, t381. 

 Patterson (A. ), on training in citizen- 

 ship, *375. 

 Patton (D.), Vegetation of Beinn Laoigh 



. . ., *374. 

 Peake (H. J. E.), on distribution of 



Bronze Age implements, 265. 



on Roman sites in Britain, 262. 



Peabson (Prof. K.), Address to Anthropo- 

 logical Section, 135. 



Petrie (Prof. W. M. Flinders), Continu- 

 ance of life on the earth, 356. 



Recent work in Egypt, *368, t382. 



Phosphates, experiments with rock, by 



G. S. Robertson, *380, t383. 

 Photosynthesis and carbohydrate meta- 

 bolism from point of view of systematic 



relationship in plants, 374. 

 Physiological Section : Address by J. 



Barcroft, 152. 

 Physiology to medicine, relation of, by 



Dr. T. Lewis, *369, 1382. 

 Pit-mound plantations, records of growth 



of, by P. E. Martineau, *374, t382. 

 Plane algebraic curves of degree n with 



multiple point of order n-l . . ., by 



Prof. H. Hilton, *351. 

 Plant autographs . . ., by Sir J. C. Bose, 



*375. 



electricity, by Prof. A. D. Waller, 



*369. 



Pliocene flora, history of west European, 

 . . ., by Mrs. E. M. Reid, *372, t382. 



Pneumatic conveying of materials, by 

 Prof. W. Cramp, *366, t381. 



Potatoes, wart disease in, by H. V. 

 Taylor, *379, t383. 



Potato trials, experimental error in, by 

 F. J. Chittenden, *379. 



PouLTON (Prof. E. B.), Preliminary 

 account of hereditary transmission of 

 a . . . marking in forewing of currant 

 moth, *360. 



Precipitive reactions as means of deter- 

 mining systematic relationships in 

 animals and plants, *375. 



Prideaux (Dr. E.), A psychologist's 

 attitude towards telepathy, *371. 



Protoplasm and Pseudopodia, by E. 

 Heron-Allen and A. Earland, *359. 



Proudman (Prof. J.), on harmonic 

 analysis of tidal observations in the 

 British Empire, 323. 



Psychologist's attitude towards tele- 

 pathy, by Dr. E. Prideaux, *371. 



Psychology, ... a national institute of 

 applied, by Dr. G. H. Miles, *371. 



an independent section of, by 



Dr. W. H. R. Rivers, *369. 



independence of, by Dr. C. S. 



Myers, *369, t382. 

 of industrial convalescence, by 



Prof. E. L. Collis, *371, t382. 

 of industrial life . . ., by S. 



Wyatt, *371, t382. 

 Pye (D. R.), and H. T. Tizard, 



Specific heat and dissociationininternal- 



combustion engines, *364, fSSl. 



Radio-telegraphy, efficiency of trans- 

 mitting aerials, and powe rrequired for 

 long-distance, by Prof. G. W. O. 

 Howe, *365, t381. 



Railways and their obligations to th 

 community, by A. H. Garstang, *404 



