[ 565 ] 



INDEX to VOL. XXXII. 



ACID, on a remarkable new, 400. 



Allotropic silver, on, 337, 564. 



Alloys, on changes of voltaic energy 

 of, during fusion, 27. 



Ames (J. S.) on homologous spectra, 

 319. 



Ayrton (Prof. W. E.) on alternate 

 current and potential difference 

 analogies in the methods of mea- 

 suring power, 204. 



Azoimide, on, 400. 



Bartoli (A.) on the measurement of 

 the chemical intensity of the solar 

 radiation, 480. 



Basalt, on the specific heat of, 353. 



Bell (A,) on some Post-Tertiary 

 marine deposits, 140. 



Bell, on the determination of the 

 beats in the vibrations of a re- 

 volving, 370. 



Blakesley's method of measuring 

 power in transformers, on, 185. 



Blondlot (R.) on the determination 

 of the dielectric constant of glass, 

 230. 



Bonney (Prof. T. G.) on the crystal- 

 line rocks of the Lizard district. 

 136. 



Books, new: — Denning's Telescopic 

 Work for Starlight Evenings, 127 ; 

 Routh's Treatise on Analytical 

 Statics, 129 ; Dixon's Foundations 

 of Geometry, 130; Hermite's Ex- 

 plication de l'epoch Quaternaire 

 sans Hypotheses, 131 ; Becker's 

 Structure of a portion of the Sierra 

 Nevada of California, Antiquities 

 from under Tuolumne Mountain 

 in California, Notes on the Early 

 Cretaceous of California and 

 Oregon, 226, 227; Hagen's The 

 Photochronograph and its appli- 

 cation to Star-Transits, 228; 

 Oliver, Wait, and Jones's Treatise 

 on Trigonometry, Treatise on Al- 

 gebra, 316; Jones's Logarithmic 

 Tables, 316; Fine's Number- 

 System of Algebra, 317 ; Hobson's 

 Treatise on Plane Trigonometry, 

 317 j Whiting's Course of Expe- 



riments in Physical Measurement, 

 396, 561 ; Backhouse's Structure 

 of the Sidereal Universe, 397 ; 

 Molenbroek's Theorie der Quater- 

 nionen, 477. 



Boulder-clay, on wells in West- 

 Suffolk, 228. 



Callendar (H. L.) on the construc- 

 tion of platinum thermometers, 

 104. 



Capacity, on a probable relation- 

 ship between specific inductive, 

 and latent heat of vaporization, 

 113. 



Chalk, on a phosphatic, at Taplow, 

 134. 



Charpentier (M.) on retinal oscilla- 

 tions, 397. 



Chattock (A. P.) on the electrifica- 

 tion of steel needle-points in air, 

 285. 



Chemical action at a distance, on, 

 145, 478. 



Chlorine, on the expansion of, by 

 light as applied to the measure- 

 ment of the intensity of rays of 

 high refrangibility, 277. 



Chree (C.) on some applications of 

 physics and mathematics to geo- 

 logy, 233, 342. 



Chronograph stylus, on a new form 

 of, 383. 



traces, on an instrument for 



measuring, 126. 



Colour of pigments, on the influence 

 of temperature on the, 401. 



Colours, lecture-illustration of com- 

 plementary, 399. 



Compressibility of liquids, on an 

 apparatus for measuring the, 79. 



Cooper (W. J.) on the nature of 

 solution, 473. 



Crova, on the analysis of the light 

 diffused by the sky, 141. 



Curtius (T.) on a remarkable new 

 acid, 400. 



Davison (C.) on the Inverness earth- 

 quakes of 1890, 229. 



Diamagnetic polarity, on the ab- 

 surdity of, 192, 253, 318. 



