HARDWICKE'S SCIENCE-GOSSIP. 



287 



Notes ok New Books {coniinxted): — 



Primer of the Art of Massage, 249 



Realm of Nature, an Outline of Physio- 

 graphy, 79 



Report of the Smithsonian Institute, 

 1890, 248 



Starry Realms, 202 



Study of Animal Life, 203 



Systematic List of British. 01i?ocene 

 and Eocene Mollusca in the British 

 Museum of Natural History, 80 



Tenth Annual Report of the United 

 States* Geological Survey, 80 



Theoretical Mechanics, Elementary 

 Stage, 147 



Wood-Carving, with Suggestions on 

 Chip-Carving, 249 



Oats, Animated, 23 

 Obituary : — 



Sir George B. Airy, 42 



Professor Quatrefages, 44 



Mr. Henry Walter Bates, F.R.S., 87 



Professor Thomas Sterry Hunt, 87 



Professor James Thompson, 160 

 Observations on PlialZits impudtcus, 16, 17 

 Observations on the Habits of a Mason 



Wasp, 196, 197, 198 

 Observations on the Primulaceas, 225, 226 

 On Some Moss-Dwelling Cathypnada^. 



with Descriptions of Five New Species, 



271 

 On our Future Supplies of Energy, 201, 



202 

 On the Underground Geology of London, 



251, 252, 253 

 Orchid Flowers, Abnormal, 21, 22 

 Orchids without Pollen, Fertilization of, 



24T, 242 

 Origin of Metal Veins, 191 

 Onuthopus TOSeuSf 69 

 Owls and Mice, 262 



Papers on- Flints, 47, 70 



Parasite Tendency of Rotifers, 219 



Peculiar Crocus, 117 



Penzance, Natural History of, 237 



Periwinkle, Malformation of, 116 



Pliallus impudicus, Observations on, 16 



Photographing Flying Eullets, 166 



Photography, and Photograpic Lenses, 80 



Physiology of the Invertebrata, 202 



Pinastri sphinx t 260 



Pine Marten, 161 



Piop/tSa caset, 143 



Plague of Caterpillars in Epping Forest, 



161 

 Plague of Flies, 23 

 Pond Life Studies, 22T, 244, a5i, 267 

 Pond Life in Winter, Microscopical, 115 

 Possible Coal-Fields in East Anglia, 25 

 Practical Botanical Queries, 188 

 Practitioner's Index, 81 

 Preservation of Sea-Urchins, 26r 



Preserving Dragon-flies, 239 

 Preserving Hepatic^, 142 

 Preserving the Epidermis of Shells, 212 

 Prickly Holly, 116 

 Primrose Family, Diseases of, 91 

 Probable Coal-Fields of East Anglia, 141 

 Protection of Birds, 162 

 Provident Field-Mouse, 71 

 Pyrenees, Botanical Holiday in the, 130, 

 150 



Quekett Club, 90, 160 



Query as to an Algerian Insect, 262 



RanonculacejEj Morphological Notes 



ON THE, iSS 



Red Mountains of Sutherland, 1S9 

 Relation of Geology tD Archaeology, 1S9 

 Remarkable Specimen of Tway-BIade, i65, 



261 

 Reminiscence of Malta, 105 

 Reptiles, Edwards', 23 

 Res Judicalez, 202 

 Resting, 215 

 Restoration of Slides attacked by Fungus 



Growths, 211, 212 

 Rhizopods, Rossendale, 28 

 Rhizome and Allied Forms, 217, 21S 

 Rival to the Toad in the Rock, 261, 262 

 Rose, the Violet, and the Buttercup, 



Colouration of the, 217, 218 

 Rossendale Rhizopods, 28, 29, 129 

 Rotifera, Notes on the Genus Distyla, 



Class, 15, 16 

 Royal Microscopical Society, 190, 236 



Sallows and Moths, 2r, 270 



Sand Markings, 237, 238 



Sandpipers, Siberian, 237 



Saugor, Scum at the Pilot-Station, 90 



Schematism of Shells in Mollusca Glosso- 



phora, 127 

 Science-Gossip, 18, 19, 20, 42, 67, 87, 88, 

 89, 112, 138, 157, 184, 208, 209, 210, 211, 

 233» 2 34» 235, 259, 260, 276 

 Scum at the Pilot Station, Saugor, 90 

 Sea-Serpent, The Extinction of the Great, 



1 

 Sea-Spinach, 143 

 Sea-Urchins, Preservation of, 261 

 Seaford, Recreative and Scientific, 145 



Secreting Glands in the Feet of Flies, 85, 

 85, 87 



Sectionising Hydra vz'ridis, 187 



Sexual Selection, 238, 271 



Shells with Double Mouths, 21 



Shells of South Africa, Marine, 203 



Shells, Preserving the Epidermis of, 212 



Shells of Stourport, 226, 227, 228 



Siberian Sandpiper, 237 



Silloth in August, 14, 15 



Singular Beak of Fowl, 116 



Sirocco as a Disintegrating Agent, with 



Special Reference to its Effect on the 

 Strata of the Maltese Islands, 7, 8, 9, 10 



Slug Fauna, Endemic Features of the 

 British, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259 



Slug, Variegated, 263 



Smithsonian Institution, Annual Reports, 

 So 



Snake-Stone, 70 



Solar Year, 23, 46, 7r 



Some Famous Collecting - Grounds for 

 Dragon-flies, 17, 18, 65, 66, 70, 97, 12S, 

 154, 178 



Some Stalked Actinophryans, 124 



Somersetshire Sand-Tots, their Geologi- 

 cal History, 75, 76, 77 



Song of the Wagtail, 46 



Sparrows attackingiGoldfinches, 191 



Species, Varieties, etc., described or 

 observed in Great Britain and Ireland 

 since the Publication of Babington's 

 "Manual," Ed. 8, (1881), and Hooker's 

 " Student's Flora," Ed. 3, (1SS4), igS, 

 199, 200, 201, 223, 224 



" Sphinx Plnastri," 260, 261 



Spontaneous Combustion, 167 



"Sporting" Clover and Rare Plants, 22 



Scarry Realms, 202 



Stammering and Stuttering, 269 



Stockport Naturalists at the Isle of 

 Man, 1 66 



Strange Conduct of Cats and Hens, 165 



Strange Site for a Robin's Nest, 166 



Studies, Pond-life, 261 



Study of Animal Life, 203 



Sun's Reflection in Still Water, 143 



Supplementary Report upon the Tes- 

 taceous Mollusca, 260 



Supplies of Energy, On our Future, 

 201-202 



Supposed Breeding of the Scoter in 

 Chichester, 21 



Sussex, Worm-Hunting in, 122 



Sutherland, Red Mountains of, 189 



Swan's Feat, 70 



Swifts, Late, 23 



Systematic List of British Oligocene and 

 Eocene Mollusca in the British Museum 

 of Natural History, 80 



Tanganyika; Eleven Years in Cen- 

 tral Africa, 202 



Tenth Annual Report of the United States' 

 Geological Survey, 1888, 1889, p. 80 



Termites, 2r3 



Testaceous Mollusca, Supplementary Re- 

 port upon, 260 



Toad in the Rock, Rival to, 261, 262 



Toad Spawn, 23 



Toads, Indian, 140 



To the Vineyards and the Play, 4, 5, 6, 7 



Trees, Notes on, 91, 92 



Tree-sap, Icicles from Exuding, 11S 



Tway-BIade, Remarkable Specimen of, 

 188, 261 



