Hunt, T. S., salt region 



Hydric sulphide, Cooke, 42^ 

 Hydrogen in i 



tion of, 146. 

 Hydroquinone, preparation 

 Hypovanadic oxide, 147. 



" ' 



Illinois Mus. Nat. Hist., Bulletin, 24 

 Indium, spectra of, 57. 



oil. 221. 

 Iodine trichloride, 461. 

 Irving, R., crystalline rocks of "Wis., ; 



J 

 Jackson, C. L., waste-product in 



aniline manufacture, 449. 

 Jnrqu >,,, . rliodein, a new test for 



., Catalogue of Astronomical 

 a and researches, 87. 

 , Paleozoic fossils 



on Territory, 157. 



k, habits of Formica rufa, 241. 



is, glyoxalyl-urea, 463. 



P. B., obituarv. White, 169. 

 Melezitose, 374. 

 Mendekeff, Mariotte's law, 58. 

 Mendelsohn, beech-wood tar-creosote. 30 



r of Dec. 21st, 1876, 166.' 

 ric stone and iroi 



Meteorology, contributions to, Loomis, 1, 



of Golden, Colorado, 326. 

 Meter, standard, 149. 

 Metric System, 244. 

 Meyer, E. v., platinic sulphide, 301. 

 Meyer, V., increase of weight by com- 

 bustion, 304. 



equivalence of nitrogen, 373. 



iv, New York, 326. 

 Milne, S., ice work, Newfoundland, 155. 

 Mineral analysis, note on, Clarke, 290. 

 Mineralogical Magazine, 162. 

 [ineralogy, Groth's Journal of, 1 62. 



LeConte, J. L., Rynchophora, 242. 

 Leidy, observations on Rhizopods, 5 



" s of work s on vegetable 



JO rption ( 



I New South 

 Lommel, fluorescence, 380, 466. 



GothitefromMi 



• tity of, Chester, 

 Pelagite, 318. 



