I N D E X. 



• • • 



XXIU 



I 



\f 





i^tr^A^^^Liche Carpenter, Dr., 



animal and v 



■^getak 



11. ^jt'. "^^ BotXantoni, Professor, experiments of, 

 ' ^1 ; deveUj" with superheated flasks, i. 436 ; 



* ^^' 433; rela^^ ^^^^ bent-neck flasks, ii. g. 



" " '" ^ on correlation of 



21 ; continuity of 



types of Foraminifera, ii. 104 ; 



'^ views of, concerning individual- 



5) nature of, i. 2D - ^^-y* ^^- 55-^ » *^^ Foraminifera, ii. 

 546. "^^'V 61 1 ; epidemic diseases, cliii. 



Carter, Mr. H. J., on development 

 of gonidial-cell in Characeee, i. 1 8 7 ; 

 heterogenetic changes in gonidial- 

 cell, ii. 378; transformations in 

 Spirogyra, ii. 387 ; mode of origin 

 of Otostoma, ii. 479; transform- 

 ations of Ciliated Infusoria, ii. 



relations of Amoebse to 



^^- 193; nature of ^ 

 ^netic, ii. 62, " 



i 



ts, nature of, i.o^.fi 

 '^is, nature of. 



I 



. 11- 545. 546. 

 ir speciahzedorgai 



th, cxxix. 



mstituents of, asii 



1. 



48 ; heterif 

 (Sangt 



in, ii. 332; 

 )f, ii. 362; diseasesi 



:harles, on Pans[^ 

 theories concemiBg! 



497 



Astasias, Ixxxix. 

 Cells, formation and nature of, i. 

 144-158; formation of gonidial- 

 cell in Characeae, i, 187; inde- 

 pendent origin of, in Phaneroga- 

 mia, i. 190; as products of deve- 

 lopment, i. 216; origin of. in 

 Blastemata, i. '220-231; another 

 mode of origin of, i. 231 ; hete- 

 rogenetic changes in, ii. 338- 



345- 



of 



form* 



ult, M., on vital fe-^^^^^1^^ theory, discussion of, i. 143- 



-^hara, M. Nicolet on transforma- 

 tions in filaments of, ii. 474; 

 origin of Ciliated Infusoria from 

 protoplasm of, ii. 478, 

 haracese, on development of goni- 

 dial-cell in, i. 187. (See Nitella.) 

 hild, Dr., on original evolution of 



,, . organic life, i. 92; experiments 



M. Ad., on succ^^' ^^ fermentation, i. 416. 

 '^^^rth, i'^S^fChlorococcus vesicles, transforma- 



urce 



i. 135- 



exander, on_ 

 Phanerogamic, ^ 

 16; formation ot=.. 



1vl.de,ononginoi- 

 ^nfervse, n- 454' 



pory of hJ^' '\ \ 4 



Ll 



rtifici 



al iorr^' 



tioc 



tion of, into Oxytricha and Plce- 



sconia, ii. 467 ; aggregations of, 



into * winter-egg ' of Hydatina, 



11. 5M; relation of, to Lichens, 



lui; developmental changes of, 



liv; production of, from^Proto- 



nema, Ixviii; relation of, to Gleo- 



.. natw^ capsa, Ixix. 



-specii}?jji;Sf Chlorophyll, influence of, in meta- 



rei-ms oU c^ j^)^ sf morphic changes, ii. 425. 



ture [ 



3n 



Chlorophyll-corpuscles, of Nitella, 

 transformations of, ii. 407 ; of 

 Euglense into Enchelys, ii. 410; 

 of Moss-radicles into Monads, ii. 

 411; of Vaucheria and Nitella 

 into Desmids, ii. 418. 



Cholera, Dr. Aitken on, cxxix, 

 cxxxviii. 



Cienkowski, views concerning Aci- 

 netae and Vorticelloe, xciv-xcvi. 



Ciliated Infusoria, mode of origin 

 of, ii. 238, 288; reproduction of, 

 ii. 290-297; relation of, to the 

 pellicle, ii. 299; other influences 

 affecting, ii. 302 ; digestion in, ii. 



direct transformation of 



132 



from 



I 



Euglenoe into, ii. 459 ; production 

 of, from Monads and Amoeboe, ii. 

 472; origin of, from protoplasm 

 of Chara, ii. 478 ; from animal 

 matrices, ii. 48^; from eggs of 

 Gasteropods and Rotifers, ii. 488; 

 convertibility of forms of, ii. 492 ; 

 ascending transformations of, ii. 

 5C0 ; encystment of, ii. 500 ; va- 

 riations in habitat of ii. 535 ; 

 varied modes of reproduction of, 

 xcvii-cv; successive forms of, in 

 infusions, cvi ; relations of, to 

 Planaria, cvii. 



Closterium, production of, 



Euglense, ii. 446. 

 Cobbold, Dr., on Psorosperms, ii. 



353- 

 Cohn, Professor, on Bacteria, i. 270; 

 on constitution of Pelhcle, i. 278 ; 

 on origin of Empusa. ii. 330; ex- 

 periments w^ith Stephanosphsera, 

 Ixxxi ; observations on transform- 

 ations of Protococcus, Ixxxii ; suc- 

 cession of Ciliata in Infusions, 

 cvi. 



Colloidal matter, bodies emerging 

 from solutions of, ii. 65. 



Colloids, Professor Graham on dis- 

 tinction between crystalloids and, 

 i. 88; properties of, i. 89; insta- 

 bility of, i. H6 ; interchangeability 

 of crystalloids and, ii. 38 ; nature 

 of, ii. 52. 



2 



( 



s 



