INDEX 



References to addresses, reports, and papers printed in extended form are 



given in italics. 

 * Indicates that the title only of a communication is given. 

 When a page reference to a paper is given in italics, it is to a note of its 



publication elsezohere, or to a note of other publications by the author 



on the same subject. 

 References preceded by the abbreviation Appdx. will be found in the appendix 



immediately preceding this index. 



Absolute rates of reaction of large 

 molecules, by Dr. Henrv Evring, 



338- 



A.C. method specification in per- 

 meability measurement, by Dr. 

 L. G. A. Sims, 395,, 527. 



.Activation of specific bonds on 

 surfaces, by Prof. H. S. Taylor, 



338*, 519- 



Adult education, discussion by Prof. 

 R. Peers, J. F. Horrabin and 

 W. E. Williams, 437. 



Aeolian deposits of Lower Bunter, 

 Worcestershire and E. Shrop- 

 shire, by F.W. Shotton, 354. 



Agricultural geography of Holland, 

 Lines., by G. L Smith, 376. 



Agriculture, changes in, as illus- 

 trated by central Derbyshire, by 

 Dr. H. C. K. Henderson, 376. 



Agriculture, present economic posi- 

 tion of, by A. H. Brown, 440. 



Agriculture, State intervention in, by 

 J. M. Caie, 249, 440*. 



Alexander Pedler Lecture, 518*. 



Algae of pond margins, by J. W. G. 

 Lund, 434. 



Algebra, unification of, in schools, 

 discussion by Prof. E. H. Neville, 

 G. L. Parsons, M. H. A. Newman, 

 and W. J. Langford, 344, ^'iiQ. 



Altitude record flight, by A. Swan, 

 392,52/. 



Amalgams, magnetic properties of, 

 by Prof. L. F. Bates, 341, 5ig. 



Amphioxus, digestive system, by 

 E. J. W. Barrington, 367. 



Anglo-Saxon invasion in light of 



early Welsh poetry, by Kenneth 



Jackson, 397. 

 Anglo-Saxon population of England, 



by Dr. G. M. Morant, 398. 

 Animal dietary experiments applied 



to problems of human nutrition, 



by Dr. A. L. Bacharach, 408*. 

 Annual meetings, table, xii. 

 Answer patterns, by Dr. D. A. 



Walker, 420, 322. 

 Anterior pituitary and secondary 



sexual characters, by Prof. E. A. 



Spaul, 371*. 

 Anthropology and administration, 



discussion by Kingsley Roth, 



G. E. Harvey and H. A. Fos- 



brooke, 401. 

 Anthropometric survev of Somerset 



by Prof. W. W. Jervis and S. J. 



Jones, 398. 

 .\pparent enlargement of the setting 



sun, by Dr. Vaughan Cornish, 



374- 

 Aquatic and marsh plants of India 

 and Burma, by K. P. Biswas, 



432- 



Armstrong, A. L., Climatic varia- 

 tions in the Pleistocene, 355. 



Palaeolithic man in Notting- 

 hamshire, 395. 



p-Arsanilic acid, new derivatives of, 

 by Sir G. T. Morgan and E. 

 Walton, 347, 520. 



Artemia salina, report on, 291. 



Assam origins in relation to Oceania, 

 by Prof. J. H. Hutton, 161, 399*. 



