806 
Earth, early knowledge of rotundity of, 
142; state of interior of, 480. 
Earthquake in England, map, 740; atsea, 
642; Swiss, of 1881, 28; waves, 114. 
Eaton, H. W. Electric-light tests at the 
Louisville exposition, 14; a tailed child, 
673; the Toepler-Holtz machine, 7/. 
7338. 
Kclipses, ancient, 637. 
Eppy, H. T. Radiant heat, 88, 171. 
Eddystone lighthouse, new, 82. 
Edinburgh university, 639; terc2ntenary 
celebration of, 371. 
Education, liberal, 435, 704, 739; scientific 
methods in, 745; technical, 789. 
Educational rock-suites, 234. 
Egg-cocoons of Lycosa, 685. 
Egypt, civilization of, 55. 
Ekhmeem, necropolis at, 609. 
Electric balloon, z//. 152, 196. 
Electric-light _arithmetic, 692; in our 
homes, 521; systems, tests of, 174; 
tests, 14; use of, in building, 425; use 
of, in gunpowder-mills, 498. 
Electric machine, il/. 753; signals, 7d. 
243; time-signals, 59, 7//. 401. 
Electrical apparatus, loan-collection of, 
670; books, 419; engineers, American 
institute of, 668; exhibition at Philadel- 
phia, i//. 398; international, 113; in- 
duction, 674; science, progress of, 
258. 
Electricity, 202, 262,729; measurement of, 
692; researches on, 549. 
Elephant, white, 170, 212. 
Eleusis pallida, 768. 
Elevator, atmospheric, 494. 
Eliot, on liberal education, 704, 759. 
Evuiort, H. W. The monk-seal of the 
West Indies, Monachus tropicalis Gray, 
ill. 752. 
Elliott, H. W., on carnivorous habits of 
the muskrat, 457. 
Ellisia nyctelea, 395. 
Ellzey, M. G., on prepotency of male par- 
ent, 424. 
Embryology, human, 771; of teleosts, 802. 
Empidonax flaviventris, 553. 
Encke’s comet, 660. 
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 769. 
Energy in nature, 491. 
Engelmann, George, 238; portrait, 405; 
collection of, 639. 
Engine, magnetic, t//. 274. 
Engineers’ school of application, Willet’s 
Point, 665. 
England, earthquake in, map, 740; marine 
research in, 557. 
English, collegiate study of, 58; diction- 
ary, 527; nobility, weights of, 268; spar- 
row, 2389, 494. 
Enteledon, hindfoot of, 266. 
Entimus imperialis, 127. 
Entomology, economic, 233, 646. 
Epeira atrata, 24; basilica, 396; insularis, 
768; labyrinthica, 396. 
Epilobium latifolium, 253; spicatum, 253. 
Equus major, 295. 
Ercolani, death of, 138. 
Erosion in New Brunswick, 676. 
Erosophian microscopical society, 298. 
Erysimum parviflorum, 253. 
Erythea edulis, 629. 
Erythraea exsiccata, 639. 
Etchings, typographic, 466. 
Ethusa alba, 718; granulata, 716. 
Etowah mounds, idl. 779. 
Eupagurus longicarpus, 267; pollicaris, 
267. 
Eurypharynx pelecanoides, 620. 
Eustomias obscurus, 626. 
Eutaenia sirtalis, 67, 396. 
Evolution of Cephalopoda, id/. 122, 145; 
of zoea, ill. 518. 
Exchange post, naturalists’, 558. 
Experiment-stations, national, 301; state, 
492, 
Exploration in Africa, 413; American, 
766; congress, polar, 769. 
Explosions on London railways, 516. 
Explosive materials, 76. 
Exposure, question of, 306. 
Eyes of animals, 336. 
SCIENCE.— INDEX TO VOLUME IIL 
F.,C. L. Illusive memory, 434. 
Fagus betuloides, 168. 
Family registers, 3. 
FarQquuHArR, Henry. Professor Tait on 
the reality of force, 700. 
Farquhar, H., on freely oscillating pendu- 
lum, 424. 
Fasciated branches, 694. 
Faults of Virginia, 2//. 614. 
Fay, EK. A. Congenital deafness in ani- 
mals, 347. 
Fedia olitoria, 395. 
Fedtschenko’s collections, 270. 
Fermentation, 545. 
Ferns, Canadian, 676. 
FERREL, William. The maxima and 
minima tide-predicting machine, i//. 408. 
Festuca ovina, 253. 
Fiber zibethicus, 457. 
Field-mice, 768. 
Filaria borrida, 367; labiata, 367; sangui- 
nis-hominis, 497. 
FinHout, H. ‘The deep-sea Crustacea 
dredged by the Talisman, i//. 718; the 
deep-sea dredging apparatus of the 
Talisman, i//. 448; the deep-sea fishes 
collected by the Talisman, il/. 623. 
Finland Bay, faunal exploration of, 340. 
Firth college, technical department of, 82. 
Fischer, E., on the use of naphthaline as 
an insecticide, 455. 
Fischer, P., on invertebrates of Talisman 
expedition, il/. 657. 
Fish, bassalian, i//. 620; and game laws, 
revision of, 169; blind, from Missouri 
River, 587; culture, modern, 208; em- 
bryos, survival of, 721; viviparous, 769. 
Fish-cultural association, American, 719. 
Fisher’s Manuel de conchyliologie, 212. 
Fisheries exhibition, international, 497. 
Fishes, deep-sea, i//. 625, 747; food, 
American, 722; migrations of, 721. 
FITZGERALD, G. I. Radiant heat, 88, 586. 
Fitzwilliam museum, 697. 
Fleming. See Lydtin, Fleming, and 
Van Hertsen. 
Fletcher, J., on Flora ottawaensis, 26. 
Flint, J. M., on medicine among Chinese, 
739. 
Floods, Ohio, 214, 227, 371; cause of, 528; 
prevention of, 385. 
Flora of Labrador, 359, 402; Ottawaensis, 
26; of Upper Yukon, 282. 
Florida Foraminifera, 736; geology and 
natural history of, 637; shell-mounds 
of, 736; springs of, 333. 
Flower, W. H., 212; appointment of, 272; 
on study of anthropology, 801. 
Flowers, protection of, 699, 712, 743; sexes 
of, 554; protection act, 743. 
Fluorite, phosphorescent, 640. 
Fou, H. Microbes, 128. 
Folk-lore of Yucatan, 270. 
Foraminifera from Florida, 736. 
Forbes, W. A., scientific papers of, 298. 
Force, reality of, 700. 
Forestry, artificial, 488; congress, 368. 
Forficula auricularia, 207. 
Formations, names of, 59. 
Formica rufa, 423. 
Fornax badius, 235; Hornii, 235. 
Fossil bones from Louisiana, 295; leaves, 
24. 
FOULKE, Sara G. Manayunkia speciosa, 
303; the reproduction of Clathrulina 
elegans, 236, 435. 
Foulke, Sara G., on Apsilus bipera, 295. 
Fouquiera splendens, 4. 
Fox-squirrel, habit of, 747. 
Fragaria vesca, 253; Virginiana, 359. 
Franklin, S. R., 238. 
Frazer. See Connett and Frazer. 
French academy, prizes of, 669 ; geographi- 
cal societies, 771; sensitiveness of, to 
criticism of scientific work, 530. 
Frisby on comet of 1882, 287. 
Fritscu, A. A human skull from the 
loess of Podbaba, near Prague, 2//. 785. 
Fuel, economy of,in iron manufacture, 358. 
Fulgur canaliculata, 267, 494; carica, 267. 
Fulgurite from Oregon, 735. 
Fulic language, 742. 
Fungi, edible and poisonous, 164. 
Gadus morrhua, 189. 
GacE, A. P. Inertia, 561. 
GaGcE, 8.H. The application of photog- 
raphy to the production of natural-his- 
tory figures, 2/2. 443. 
Galathodes Antonii, 713. 
Galicia, geology of, 727. 
Galium boreale, 253; pubens, 4. 
Gallaudet, E. M., on teaching the deaf, 
505; on international relations, 606. - 
Gallinula galeata, 216. 
GALTON, Francis. His proposed ‘ family 
registers,’ 3. 
Galton’s Life-history album, reviewed,. 
a ; record of family faculties, reviewed, 
Gambils, 111. 
Gambrusia patruelis, 769. 
GANNETT, Henry. The geodetic work. 
a the Hayden and Wheeler surveys, 
AT. ; 
GARMAN, S. Muraenopsis, 347; the old- 
est living type of Vertebrata, Chlamy- 
doselachus, 345; a peculiar selachian, 
all. 116; eating horns, 88. 
Gas, natural, 723. 
Gases, critical state of, 98. 
Gastrostomus, pedunculated lateral-line- 
organs of, 7/1. 5; Bairdii, 5. 
GATSCHET, A. S. Recent linguistic re-. 
searches, 759. . 
Gaultheria Shallon, 236. 
Geodetic work of Hayden and Wheeler- 
surveys, 447. 
Geographic names, derivation of, 853 ter-- 
minology, poverty of, 118. 
Geographical congress, German, 398; so- 
cieties, French, 771; society royal, award. 
of medals of, 80. 
Geographisches jahrbuch, reviewed, 200. 
Geography-teaching, 86. 
Geological formations, synchronism of, 
33, 60; institute of Austria, 611; mu- 
seum at St. Johns, 556; observations in. 
Canadian north-west territory, 647 ; rela-- 
tives of Krakatoa, id. 762; report, D- 
linois, 332; society of London, Ameri- 
can awards of, 384; survey of Alabama, 
report for 1881-82, reviewed, 418; of 
Bohemia, 611; of territories, 369. 
Geologists, international congress of, 168. 
Geology, chemical, 59; fundamental theo-. 
ry of dynamic, 511; non-professional 
work in, 428; of the Asturias and Ga- 
licia, 727; of Grand Canon, ill. 3275. 
of northern Canada, 755. 
Geranium caespitosum, 4. 
Germ-theory of disease, 133. 
German geographical congress, 898; iron, 
and steel industry society, 669; univer-. 
sities, scientific instruction in, 399. 
Germany, cannibalism in, 298; tempera-. 
ture in, 546. P 
Ghiliaks, 340. : 
GILBERT, G. K. Capitalization of numes. 
of formations, 59; ripple-marks, 7//. 
378, 
Gilbert, G. K., on deflection of river-. 
courses, 503; on Knight’s tour, 396. See 
also Lawes, Gilbert, and Warington. 
Gill, D., on determinations of stellar- 
parallax, 456, 612. 4 
GILL, T. Assumptions of museum-keep- 
ers, 615; Chlamydoselachus, 345; the. 
ichthyological peculiarities of the bas- 
salian fauna, i//. 620; osteology of the. 
cormorant, 404; the relations of Didy-. 
modus, or Diplodus, 429. 
Gill, T., on Squali, 738; on survival of fish. 
embryos, 722; and Ryder, J. A., on 
Lyomeri, Bie 
Gisborne, F. N., on electrical induction,,. 
674, 771. 
Glacial striation, 636. 
Glaciers in California, 208; of Mont 
Blanc, 771; on Mount Shasta, 208. 
Glaciology, Indiana, 7/1. 748. 
Gladstone and Tribe’s Secondary bat- 
teries, reviewed, 51. 
Glidewell mound, 637. 
Glottidia antillarum, 325; pyramidata, 325.. 
Glucose report, 169. - ; 
Glyphus marsupialis, 715. 
