CONTENTS OF VOL. XIV. 



PAGE 



President's Address, 1877 xi— xxviii 



Art. I. On Force, by F. J. PiRANi, M.A. 3—6 



II. Some Experiments in Propulsion, by S. B. Deverell, 



Esq 7—9 



III. The Present State of Meteorology, by E. L. J. Ellery, 



F.K.S., F.R.A.S 10—19 



IV. Notes on a Eemarkable Meteor seen May 20tli at 



Ballan, by Louis Le Gould, C.E 20 



V. Notes on the Design of Telescope Tubes, by W. C. 



Kernot, M.A., C.E 20—25 



VI. Notes on the Coast Line Formation of the Western 

 District, and Proofs of the Uniform Condition of 

 Meteorological Phenomena over long Periods of 

 Time, by T. E. Eawlinson, C.E 25—34 



VII. Notes on the Eecent Earthquake, by E. L. J. Ellery, 



F.E.S., F.E.A.S 34 



VIII. Notes on Barometer Construction, by George Foord, 



F.C.S 35-55 



IX. On some New Marine Mollusca,by Eev. J. E. Tennison- 

 WooDS, F.G.S.,F.L.S., Hon. Memb. Eoy. Soc. N.S.W., 

 Corr. Memb. Eoy. Soc. Victoria, Tasmania, and 

 Phil. Soc, Linn. Soc. N.S.W., &c 65—65 



X. On Various Forms of Galvanic Battery, by E. L. J. 



Ellery, F.E.S., F.E.A.S 65 



XL Extracts from Diary in Japan, by F. C. Christy, C.E. 66—84 



XII. On the Probability that a Connexion of Causation 

 will be shown to exist between the Attraction of 

 Gravitation and the Molecular Energy of Matter, 

 by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. ... .;. 84 — 91 



XIII. Experiments on the Comparative Power of some Dis- 



infectants, by James Jamieson, M.D 91—101 



XIV. On Heat and Molecular Energy, by H. S. Patching, 



Esq 102 



XV. On the History of Palaeozoic Actinology in Australia, 



by E. Etheridge, Jan., F.G.S 102—108 



XVI. On the Eatio of the Length and Height of Sea Waves, 



by S. E. Deverell, Esq 109—115 



