Contents. 
324; The COANE ME position vas ie Archipolypdcs, a + group oi RN ppd Misrata 
326; The Vogmar o 
banksii), 330; Hia on Floridian and ‘Texan Fishes, sats ; Shufelde’: s Contributions to the Anat- 
omy of Birds. 437° * pnie FaFa 3325 i Anatomy of the Chiroptera, 332; Zoological 
Notes, 333; taken off the southern coast of New England 
in 1882, 425; Migration of Animals naar the Suez — 435; Sg ley of the Sponges, 426 ; 
The Affinities of Tetraplatia volitans, n New England Waters, 426: 
Limax maximus in Central Mas sachin, k Tullberg on the structureof the Shell of Crus- 
tacea and Mollusks, 427; Wright’ s Am n Parasitic ae aes 427; Supposed D of the 
species of Ocypoda from the Bon n islands, 427; heres ae Uni o, 428; ate species of 
Polydesmus with Eyes Paidtcatant, as 428; The P: of Verte bra es as seen inthe 
and th 
ts, 4 A ma: $ 
an Whale ba; The Repetition of oe Hydrozoa, 432; Distribution of Unio pressus 
T i + Sa i 
33; 
Animals, 550; Desiccation a Pauk 551; The cause rof" ‘R t” in Sheep, 551; Chromato- 
i rg Be 
Web, 669; The St a, 
the Mouth Structure of Tadpoles, 670; Hybridization of Brook Trout and Grayling, 671; 
Effect a page on Insect Life, 671; The Hairy Woodpecker, a correction, 673; Zoological 
Notes 
Physiology. —Beneke on spe coe tt 98; A Correction, 98; Sense of Color in Cephalopoda, 
99; Physiological News, e recent accessions to our knowledge of the Physiology of the 
th mbryo f Disease 
terial Organisms, 442; The Origin and Destiny of Fat Cells, 444; Recent Embryological papers 
t j i 
the Blood, 5 
Action of Saliva, 562; Varying the os 1 Background se Reflex aer 562; ‘denon 
i el 
Plants and Animals, 563; A Text-book of Physiology, 677 ; Comparisons of Strength between 
large and small Animals, 677; The direct influence of gradual variations of temperature upon 
the rate of beat of the Dog’s Heart, 680; Skin vision, 680; Phosphorescence and Respiration in 
Annelid Worms, 681. 
Psychology.—Teaching Para Mie use of EE 100; The Habits of a caged Robin, 102; 
The Nesting of the black and , 103; A bewildered Snow-bird, 105; A Toad’s Cun- 
ning, to5; Anecdote about Cats, 220; Th e odi Diiis of a blind eo 220; Additional 
remarks relative to teaching Brutes the use of Letters, 212; Dreams, 338; z Mulleron the 
Inheritance of Traditions among social agra ” Animal Docters, 445; gar icide of Scor- 
pions, 446; Exhibition of Reasoning Powe r Bear, 448; The Se of Bees 448; 
The Frontiers of Insanity, 449; Romanes” pee Sete 564 ; Intelligence in Protozoa, 
ate age Anxiety in a horned Toad, ; Bufo americanus at Play, 683; Intelli- 
; Mat 
gence in the Elephant, 684; A Story of a Dog, 684; The Mocking Bird, 685; Maski 
rabs, 636. . 
Anthropology.—Discovery of Mound Relics at Devil river, Lake Huron, 106 ; Stone Im 
ean Miami county, Ohio, 107; Cup-shaped Stones in a 107; har of as 
we language neri Aa ono ology in Europe, 108; ee nology of the Vega, 223; The Manu- 
pa Troano, 225; Archæological Lectures, 226; Music of North American paia 226; 
an; es of A Alia. 34! ; The Antiquity of Man, 343; Bittiothers Americana, 345: Ravana 
of Miklukho- Maclay, 449; Revue d’Ethnographie, 450; Legends of the Iroquois, 451 
American Copper Artefacts; 452; Babylonian Oils ao: 452; White Indians in South Amer- 
ica, 453; Cann balism in New England, 453; The Brookville Society of Natural History, 453 ; 
