AUTHOR-SUBJECT INDEX, 1849-1961 



165 



Science — Continued 



Science and the unobservable, by H. 



Dingle. 1938: 209-226 

 Science in early England, by Charles 



L.Barnes. 1895:729-741 

 Science of yesterday, today, and to- 

 morrow, by W. F. G. Swann. i960: 



229-250 

 Science serving the nation, by Lee A. 



DuBridge. 1955: 177-187 

 Science shaping American culture, by 



Arthur H. Compton. 1941: 175- 



182 

 Scientific problems of the future, by 



H. Elsdale. 1894:667-679 

 Scientific thought in the nineteenth 



century, by William North Rice. 



l8 99 : 395-4 02 

 Stands science where she did? by Ivor 



Thomas. 1933: 239-247 



State of science, by Karl T. Compton. 



J 949 : 395-41° 

 Who will promote science? by C. G. 



Abbot. 1922: 137-143 



Woods and trees: philosophical impli- 

 cations of some facts of science, by 

 Frederick H. Krecker. 1944: 307- 

 316 



See also Research and names of 

 branches of science. 

 Scientific congresses 



Scientific Congress of Carlsruhe, by 

 M. J. Nickles. i860: 355-375 

 Scientific instruments 



Possibilities of instrumental develop- 

 ment, by George E. Hale. 1923: 

 187-193 



See also names of scientific instruments 

 Scientists 



Century's great men in science, by 

 Charles S. Pierce. 1900: 693-699 



Evolution of the scientific investiga- 

 tor, by Simon Newcomb. 1904: 

 221-233 



Toward a new generation of scientists, 

 by L. A. Hawkins. 1946: 425-430 



See also names of scientists 



Scofield, Carl S., Alkali problem in ir- 

 rigation. 1 921: 213-223 

 Salinity of irrigation water. 1935: 

 275-287 



Scott, D. H., Present position of Paleozoic 

 botany. 1907: 371-405 



Scott, Ernest Kilburn, Manufacture of 

 nitrates from the atmosphere. 19 13: 



3597384 

 Scott, Richard A., and Leopold, Estella 



B., Pollen and spores and their use 



in geology. 1957: 303-323 

 Scott, W. B., Geological climates. 1927: 



271-287 

 Sea. See Oceanography, Oceans 

 Seaborg, Glenn T., Plutonium and other 



transuranium elements. 1947: 207- 



216 

 Transuranium elements. 1959: 247- 



262 

 Seamans, Robert C, Jr., The challenge of 



space exploration. 1961:263-274 

 Seebohm, Henry, North Polar Basin. 



l8 93= 3757394 

 Seely, F. A., Time-keeping in Greece and 



Rome. 1889: 377-397 

 Seidel, R. E., and Winter, M. Elizabeth, 



New microscopes. 1944:193-219 

 Seismographs 



Electro-magnetic seismograph, by 



Palmieri. 1870: 425-428 

 Seismology 

 Earth beneath in the light of modern 



seismology, by Ernest A. Hodgson. 



I 93 I = 347-3 6 ° 

 Modern seismology, by F. J. Scrase. 



!934= 193-203 



Seismology and vulcanology: recent sci- 

 entific progress. 1884: 215-235; 

 1885: 471-493; 1887: 289-312 



Structure of the earth as revealed by 

 seismology, by Ernest A. Hodgson. 

 1939: 281-302 



See also Earthquakes 

 Selenium 



Selenium absorption by plants and 

 their resulting toxicity to animals, 

 by Annie M. Hurd-Karrer. 1935: 

 289-301 



