494 



GENERAL INDEX. 



[16 



Farrington, O. C, datolite from 



Guanajuato, 5, 285 ; nrineralogical 



notes, 10, 83. 

 Fassig, O. L., March weather in the 



United States, 8, 319. 

 Feldspars, see MINERALS. 

 Ferriere, E., La Cause premiere, 3, 



494. 

 Field Columbian Museum, publica- 

 tions, 4, 481 ; 6, 104 ; 7, 248. 

 Fiji Islands coral reefs, Agassiz, 5, 



113, 8, 80 ; Tertiary limestone reefs 



of, Agassiz, 6, 165. 

 Finland, peat bogs of, Andersson, 8, 



467 ; geological commission, 8, 467; 



10, 249. 

 Fisher, H., flora of Franz Joseph 



Land, 5, 236. 

 Fishes, Perciform, in British Museum, 



Boulenger, 1, 397. 



— fossil, in British Museum, Wood- 

 ward, 1, 396. 



Fiske, W. E., surface travel on elec- 

 trolytes, 5, 59. 



Flame temperatures, Waggener, 2, 

 379. 



Flames, theory of singing, Gill, 4, 



ill. 



Fleurent, E., Manual of Chemical 



Analysis, 5, 147. 

 Flight, possibilities of, Rayleigh, 10, 



77. 

 Flink, G., minerals of Greenland, 10, 



323. 

 Flint, J. M., recent Foraminifera, 9, 



158. 

 Flora, see BOTANY, GEOLOGY. 

 Florida, Tertiary fauna of, Dall, 7, 



71. 

 Flotation of disks and rings of 



metals, Mayer, 3, 253. 

 Fluids, transparency for long heat 



waves, Rubens and Aschkinass, 5, 



391. 



— See Liquids. 



Fluorescence and actinic electricity, 

 Schmidt, 5, 467 ; and chem. com- 

 position, Meyer, 5, 387. 



Fluorine, liquefaction, 4, 318. 



Fontaine, W. M., Mesozoic plants 

 from California, 2, 273. 



Foote, H. W., double fluorides of 

 caesium and zirconium, 1, 18 ; pol- 

 lucite, mangano-columbite and mi- 

 crolite in Maine. 1, 457. 



— rceblingite from Franklin Furnace, 

 N. J., 3, 413 ; wellsite, a new min- 

 eral, 3, 443 ; double halogen salts 

 of caesium' and rubidium, 3, 461 ; 

 double fluorides of zirconium with 

 lithium, etc., 3, 466. 



Foote, H. W., bixbyite and topaz, 

 4, 105 ; composition of ilmenite. 4, 

 108 ; clinohedrite from Franklin, 

 N. J., 5, 289. 



— composition of tourmaline, 7, 97. 



Foote, W. M., meteoric iron, Sacre- 

 mento Mts. , New Mexico, 3, 65 ; 

 native lead with rceblingite, Frank- 

 lin Furnace, N. J., 6, 187; new 

 meteoric iron, Alabama, 8, 153 ; 

 new meteoric iron, Texas, 8, 415. 



Foraminifera, recent, Flint, 9, 158. 



Forbes, E. H., chrysolite-fayalite 

 group, 1, 129 ; epidote, Hunting- 

 ton, Mass., 1, 26. 



Ford, W. E., siliceous calcites from 

 So. Dakota, 9, 352 ; calcite crystals 

 from Union Springs, N. Y. , etc., 

 10, 237. 



Fossils, see GEOLOGY. 



Foster, G. C., Electricity and Mag- 

 netism, 2, 83. 



Fowle, F. E., Jr., longitudinal aber- 

 ration of prisms, 2, 255. 



Fox Islands, Me., geology, Smith, 3, 

 161. 



Franklin, W. S., Elements of Phy- 

 sics, 1, 319; 2, 454; 4,73. 



Franz Joseph Land, geology, 5, 233; 

 flora, Fisher, 5, 236. 



Frazer, P., Weisbach's Tables for 

 . the determination of Minerals, 3, 

 162. 



Freezing points, determination, Har- 

 ker, 2, 390. 



Frenzel, A., chalcostibite and gue- 

 jarite, 4, 27. 



Fresenius, C. R., Manual of Qualita- 

 tive Analysis, 4, 473. 



Frog's Egg, Development, Morgan, 

 4, 161. 



Fuchs, G., Molekulargewichtsbestim- 

 mung, 1, 53. 



Fulgurite, spiral, Wisconsin, Hobbs, 

 8, 17. 



Funafuti, coral boring at, 5, 75 ; Sol- 

 las, 7, 317. 



Fur seals of the North Pacific Ocean, 

 Jordan, 9, 390. 



Fusion, see melting point. 



Gage, A., Physical Experiments, 5, 

 222. 



Galvanometer, new method of read- 

 ing, Rice, 2, 276. 



— shunt box for, Stine, 5, 124. 



Ganong, W. F., The Teaching Bota- 

 nist, 9, 79. 



Gas, a new, Brush, 6, 431. 

 See also CHEMISTRY. 



