694 



GENERAL INDEX. 



[18 



Fluorescence bands, Gelbke, 34, 



399- p „ 



Fog layer, coronas of, Barus, 31, 



564. 

 Food Industries, Vulte and Van- 

 derbilt, 39, 136. 



— Products, Bailey, 39, 136; Sher- 

 man, 38, 572. 



Foods, Wardall and White, 39, 

 136. 



— Pure, Olsen, 32, 401. 



Foote, H. W., solid solution in 

 minerals, 31, 25; composition of 

 analcite, 33, 433; of nephelite, 



33, 439; Peruvian bronze axes, 



34, 128; composition of albite, 

 36, 47; chrysocolla, 36, 180; 

 solid solutions in minerals, 37, 

 339. 



Foote, W. M., shower of meteoric 

 stones, Arizona, 34, 4375 ne w 

 meteoric iron from Mt. Edith, 

 West Australia, 37, 39i; new 

 meteoric iron from Sams Val- 

 ley, Oregon, 39, 80. 



Ford, W. E., herderite crystals, 

 Auburn, Me., 32, 283; analy- 

 sis of stibiotantalite, 32, 287; 

 rhodonite crystal, Franklin, 

 N. J., 32, 289; stibnite pseudo- 

 morphs, Mexico, 34, 184; re- 

 vision of Dana's Manual of 

 Mineralogy, 34, 307; hetaerolite 

 from Colorado, 35, 600; pyrox- 

 mangite, 36, 169; optical study 

 of the amphiboles, 37, I 79', 

 mineral notes, 38, 502; footeite 

 and connellite, 39, 670. 



— chemical, optical, etc., prop- 

 ties of the garnet group, 40, 

 33; Third Appendix to Dana's 

 System of Mineralogy, 40, 523- 



Forsterite, see MINERALS. 



Foshay, P. M.. glacial moraine in 

 New Hampshire, 38, 345. 



Fossils, removing tests of, Buck- 

 man, 32, 163. 



— See GEOLOGY. 



Foulk, C. W., Quantitative Chem- 

 ical Analysis, 38, 478. 



Foye, W. G., nephelite syenites of 

 Ontario, 40, 413. 



France, Mineralogy, Lacroix, 31, 

 337; 37, 204. 



Franklin, W. S., Electric Light- 

 ing, 35,193. 



— Electricity and Magnetism, 38, 

 562; 39, 314, 48o. 



Franklin Institute, Cresson 



medal, 37, 365. 

 Frazer, P., Mineral Tables, 31, 82. 

 Frogs, fossil, Moodie, 34, 286; 38, 



53i. 

 Frost data of the United States, 



Day, 32, 81. 

 Fungous Diseases of Plants, see 



BOTANY. 



Gaede, W., diffusion of gases 

 through mercury vapor, 39, 477. 



Gahrungsphysiologie, Kossowicz, 

 34, 100. 



Galapagos Islands, botanical sur- 

 vey, Stewart, 32, 78. 



Gale, H. G., Physics, 36, 423. 



Gale, H. S., sulphohalite, Cal., 38, 

 273. 



Galileo, works of, 38, 97. 



Gamma-rays, excitation, Chad- 

 wick, 35, 323; interference, 

 Shaw, 36, 420. 



Gardner, J. A., Tertiary faunas of 

 Yorktown and Duplin Forma- 

 tions, 39, 305. 



Garnet group, chemical and phys- 

 ical properties, Ford, 40, 33. 



Gas Analysis, Dennis, 36, 74. 



— Company, Centenary celebra- 

 tion, 34, 572. 



— molecules, mean free path, 

 Franck and Hertz, 35, 324; re- 

 flection, Wood, 40, 445. 



— thermometer, measurements 

 with, Day and Sosman, 31, 341; 

 33, 517. 



Gases, diffusion through mercury 



vapor, Gaede, 39, 477. 

 Gaspe, Heart of, Clarke, 36, 654. 

 Gauss, Biography, Klein and 



Brendel, 36, 423. 

 Geikie, J., Mountains, 37, 561; 



Antiquity of Man in Europe, 



38, 571. 



— obituary, 39, 486. 



Gems and Precious Stones of the 

 United States, Sterrett, 1909, 31, 

 576; 1910, 32, 398; 1911, 35, 198; 

 1912, 36, 656; 1913, 38, 487. 



Genetics, Walter, 35, 467. 



Geochemistry, Data, Clarke, 33, 



64. 

 Geographers, American, annals, 



33, 596. 

 Geographical Transcontinental 



Excursion of 1912, 35, 554. 



