4iHi 



INDEX. 



Howe, H. M., Metallurgical Labora- 

 tory Notes, 79. 



Howe, J. L., meteoric iron from 

 Virginia, 409. 



Hutchins, C. C, Boys radiomicro- 

 meter, 249. 



I 



Idaho, — Snake Eiver Plains, geology 

 and water resources, Russell, 238. 



Index Animalium, Sherborn, 334. 



Indiana, Niagara domes of northern, 

 Kindle, 459. 



Ion, charge on, produced in air by 

 Rontgen rays, Wilson, 416. 



— gaseous, carrying electricity, Thorn- 

 son, 327. 



Ionization produced by corpuscles 

 of radium, Darack, 480. 



— of water nuclei, Barus, 105, 217. 

 Iron spectrum, photography of ultra- 

 red, Lehmann, 156. 



K 



Keyes, C. R., geological structure of 

 Bolson Plains, New Mexico, 207. 



Kindle, E. M., Niagara domes of 

 northern Indiana, 459. 



Kundt, A., Experimental Physics, 

 481. 



Langley, S. P. ; " Good seeing," 89 ; 

 report of Smithsonian Institution, 

 242. 



Leverett, F., Glacial formations of 

 Erie and. Ohio Basins, 160. 



Light, interference of, Lummer and 

 Gehrcke, 326. 



Liquids, thickness of, by condensa- 

 tion, Parks, 480. 



Loomis, H. B., change of tempera- 

 ture on permanent magnets, 179. 



Louisiana, report on the geology, 

 Harris, 330. 



M 



Magnetic Declination Tables and Iso- 

 gonic Charts, 1902, Bauer, 157. 



Magnetometer, torsion, Kohlrausch 

 and Holborn, 236. 



Magnets, change of temperature on 

 permanent, Loomis, 179. 



Mai dive and Laccadive Archipela- 

 goes, Gardiner, 240, 489. 



Mann, C. R., Optics, 157. 



Marsh Collection, studies of Eocene 

 Mammalia in, Wortman, 163, 399, 

 419. 



McAlpine, D., Fungus Diseases of 

 Stone-Fruit Trees in Australia, 239. 



Mechanics, Molecular Physics and 

 Heat, Millikan, 327. 



Medway, H. E. use of rotating cath- 

 ode in electrolytic determination of 

 metals, 320. 



Metal films, electrical properties, 

 Patterson, 80. 



Metallic vapor, reversed lines of, 416. 



Metallurgical Laboratory Notes, 

 Howe, 79. 



Meteorite, free phosphorus in, Far- 

 rington, 71. 



— iron, Soudan, Cohen, 254; Virginia, 

 Campbell and Howe, 469. 



— stone, Andover, Mass., Ward, 395; 

 Bath Furnace, Kentucky, Ward, 

 316. 



Meteorites in the Vienna Museum, 

 catalogue, Berwerth, 487. 



Miers, H. A., Mineralogy, 84. 



Millikan, R. A., Mechanics, Molecu- 

 lar Physics and Heat, 327. 



Minerales de l'Afrique, les Richesses, 

 De Launay, 417. 



Mineralogy, Miers, 84. 



Minerals, Tables of, Penfield, 330. 



MINERALS. 



Amphiboles, composition of some 

 Canadian, 392. Anapite, 82. 

 Arsenic, native, Montreal, 92. Ax- 

 inite, composition, 195. 



Brunsvigite, 417. 



Chalmersite, Brazil, 83. 



Diamonds, artificial, from fused sili- 

 cates, 153; fluorescence and phos- 

 phorescence, 153. 



Hudsonite, 227. 



Koenenite, 83. 



Liveingite, 417. 



Platinum in the nickel-copper, Sud- 

 bury ores, Ontario, 137. Pykno- 

 chlorite. 417. 



Quartz, expansion of melted, Hol- 

 born and Henning, 236. 



Rickardite, new, Vulcan, Colorado, 

 69. 



Serendibite, Ceylon, 417. Serpen- 

 tine, pseudo-, Washington, 397. 

 Sperrylite, new forms, Ontario, 

 83, 450. 

 Montana, Elkhorn Mining District, 



Weed and Barrell, 158. 

 Mt. Pelee, fumarole gases from, 



Moissan, 233 ; eruption, Anderson 



and Fleet, 489. 



N 



Nathorst, A. G., Fossile Flora der 

 Polarlander, 85 ; Mesozoische Cyca- 

 dophyten, 85. 



