NATURAL HISTORY INDEX. 



Birds. — See Index of Birds. 



Botany. — Notices on Injuries done 

 to Gardens by Frost, May 1894, 

 by Rev. David Paul, LL.D., and 

 others, 36, 41 ; Plants fonnd on 

 the coasts of Cockburnspath and 

 Oldhamstocks, 43, 44; at Inner- 

 wick Castle, 47 ; in Dtinglass 

 Dean, 50 ; in Lady Chapel Wood 

 and Bothal, 76-7 ; Localities for 

 Pimpinella magna, by Dr Hardy, 

 77 ; List of Trees and Shrubs 

 grown at Bothal-bangh, 75 ; Mor- 

 peth Plants noticed by Dr Wm. 

 Turner. 66, 67; Plants and Trees 



332 ; Mites and Diseases occasion- 

 ed by them, by Dr Hardy, 354 ; 

 Sirex Gigas, 58, 68; Spiders, list 

 of, around Eyemouth, by William 

 Evans, F.R.S.B., 117; Araneidea, 

 118 ; Phalangidea, 121 ; Stenop- 

 teryx hirundinis, a parasite of the 

 Swallow, by John Turnbull and 

 Wm. Grant Guthrie, 353. 

 Geology. — of Cockburnspath and 

 coast of Oldhamstocks, 42 ; by R. 

 Richardson, F.R.S.E., 43, 183-84 ; 

 Ballabus or Alabaster Rock, 44, 

 189 ; Dunglass Dean, by Mr Geo. 

 Tate. F.G.S.. 184 : Cockburnsnath 



ured or inspected — Fruit Trees at 

 Morpeth, Trees at Bothal-haugh, 

 74 ; Firs and Oaks at Mellerstain, 

 82, 90 ; Conifers, 90 ; other var- 

 ieties, 90 ; Tulip Trees at Paxton, 

 and at Hirsel,91 ; aged Crabapple 

 tree atSpringwood Park,91; large 

 Pear-tree at Stroud, 91 ; Beeches 

 at Unthank, 176 ; Alders, 186 ; 

 Hanging tree at Bunkle Castle, 208 

 Entomology.— Bees, (Bomhi) 47 ; 

 Earthworm v. Beetle, 346 ; Glow- 

 worm, 52; Lepidoptera and Dragon 

 Flies at Coldingham Loch, 221-3 ; 

 Lepidoptera, the rarer, of the dis- 

 trict, by George Bolam, F.Z.S., 

 297; Lepidoptera of the Hawick 

 district, by Wm. Grant Guthrie, 



219, 220; Malformation of Jaw 

 of Common Trout, 233. 

 Meteorology. — Effects of Thunder- 

 storm near Longcroft, 32 ; Gravel 

 melted by Lightning at Chapel- 

 hill, Cockburnspath, 52 ; Rainfall 

 and Temperature at West Foulden 

 in 1894 ; and at Rawburn of same 

 date, by H. H. Craw, 195 ; ditto, 

 for 1895, 378 ; Hill stock at Ra,w- 

 burn, when fed in winter for 12 

 years, by the Same, 379. Meteor- 

 ological observations at Cheswick, 



1894, by Maior-Gen. Sir William 

 Crossman, K.C.M.G., 196; for 



1895, by the Same, 380 ; Rainfall 

 at Glanton Pyke in 1894, by F. 

 J. W. CoUingwood, 197. 



