SCIENCE. — INDEX TO VOLUME III. 
Gnaphalium polycephalum, 218. 
Gold sands of California, 797. 
Goniatites ambigena, 126; compressus, 
126; fecundus, 126. 
Gonostoma microdon, 628. 
GoopeE, G. B. The exploring voyage of 
the Challenger, reviewed, il. 576; the 
invention of the vertical camera in pho- 
tography, 672; Professor Gill on as- 
sumptions of museum-Keepers, 703. 
Goode, G. B., on modern fish-culture, 
208; on oyster-industry, 720. 
Goodwin’s Walks in the regions of science 
and faith, reviewed, 131. 
Gordon’s Electricity and magnetism, re- 
viewed, 262. 
Gore, J. W. Tornado in western North 
Carolina, 474. 
Gosselin, on anaesthetics, 369. 
Government and economic entomology, 
646. 
Grades of railway-curves, 463. 
Gradle’s Bacteria and the germ-theory of 
disease, reviewed, 133. 
Grand Canon, geology of, é//, 327. 
Grand Falls of St. John River, 769. 
Grandidier, on Hovas, 341. 
Granulus vermicularis, 323. 
Graphite in iron, 2387. 
Graves’s Life of Hamilton, reviewed, 19. 
‘Gray’s Absolute measurements in elec- 
tricity and magnetism, reviewed, 419. 
‘Great Basin, lakes of, 322. 
Greely relief expedition, 113, 172, 218, 610, 
Map, 317, 533, 670. 
Green-Mountain railway, 415. 
GREENE, C.E. The cantilever-bridge at 
Niagara Falls, iJ/.572; Green-Mountain 
railway, Mount Desert Island, 415. 
Greenland, expedition to, 771; Danish 
expedition to, 286; north, geognosy and 
geography of, 611. 
Greenlanders, characteristics of, 742. 
Greenwich meridian as prime meridian, 1. 
Griffiths, A. B., on origin of petroleum, 
526. 
Grinewetzky’s crossing of Novaia Zemlia, 
Groff’s Plant-analyses, 425. 
Growth, 165. 
Guatemala, explorations in, 115. 
Guatemaltec languages, 794. 
Gueliaa, el, 296. 
Gulf of Mexico, depth of, 504. 
Gunnison mining-region, topography of, 
293. 
Guyot, Arnold, 209; portrait, 218. 
Guyot’s Creation, reviewed, 599, 704. 
Gyration of vibrating pendulum, idl. 775. 
Gyromitra, esculenta, 165. 
Gyroscope, 237. 
Haanel, E., on apparatus for assaying, 
675. 
Habenaria dilatata, 253. 
Hacen, H. A. The occurrence of the 
Hessian fly in North America before 
the revolution, 482. 
Hagen, H. A., on segmental organs in 
odonate larvae, 25. 
Hacvue, A. Red skies in China five years 
ago, 121. 
Higue’s work in Yellowstone national 
park, 138. 
Halesia, 736; diptera, 335; tetraptera, 335. 
Haliaetus leucocephalus, 424. 
Haui, E. H. Hall’s phenomenon, 387; 
inertia, 482, 562. 
Hall, G. Stanley, 524. 
Hall, James, bestowal of Walker prize 
on, portrait, 571; on fossil sponges, 666. 
Hall phenomenon, 386; in liquids, 360. 
Halos, 115. 
HALsTED, B. D. Conditions of growth 
of the wheat-rust, 457; italics for scien- 
tific names, 32; retrograde metamor- 
phosis of a strawberry-flower, 7z//. 302. 
Hamilton, life of, 19. 
Hammond’s Electric light in our homes, 
reviewed, 521. 
Hann’s Climatology, reviewed, 162. 
Harar, exploration of, 800. 
Harbors, table of depths for, 641. 
Hares, North-American, 367. 
Harpalus pennsylvanicus, 768. 
Harrington, W. H., on Coleoptera, 235. 
Harvard university herbarium, 235; obser- 
vatory, 167; bulletin, 424; summer 
course of botany, 668. 
Harvey, F. L. A colt and its mother’s 
blanket, 672. 
Hastines,C. 8. Inertia, 559; asingular 
optical phenomenon, 501. 
Hatschek, on Sipunculus nudus, 682, 
Haupt, L. M., on rapid transit in Phila- 
delphia, 693. 
Havestadt’s Chilidugu, reviewed, 550. 
Hayes, E. E., on figuring fossil leaves, 
769. 
ee F. V. A scientific swindler, 
Hayden’s survey, twelfth report of, re- 
viewed, 7/7. 103. 
Hayden and Wheeler surveys, geodetic 
work of, 447. 
Hayem, on new morphological element of 
blood, 46. 
HAzgEN, H. A. The motion of waves of 
cold in the United States, map, 149. 
Hazen, H. A., on sun-glows, 336. 
Health association, American, 802; exhibi- 
tion, 799. 
Heat from soil, character of, 504. 
Heating Massachusetts institute of tech- 
nology, method of, 796. 
Hedysarum boreale, 253. 
HEILPRIN, A. Synchronism of geologi- 
cal formations, 60. 
Heilprin, A., on carboniferous Ammo- 
nites, 335; on Foraminifera from Flor- 
ida, 736. 
Helical springs, 724. 
Helicidae, British, 342. 
Heliostats, theory of, 697. 
Helisoma trivolvis, 323. 
Helix aspersa, effect of various foods on, 
370; virgata, 342. 
Hellmann, G., on variation of temperature 
in Germany, 546. 
Helminthophaga celata, 216, 503. 
Hemidactylium scutatum, 264. 
HENDRICKS, J. EK. Deflective effect of 
earth’s rotation, 275; gyration of a vi- 
brating pendulum, i//. 775. 
Heracleum lanatum, 2538. 
Bay new theory of, 388; study of, 
734. 
Herény, report of observatory at, 664. 
Herrick, C. L., on Monospilus, 494. 
Herrick, F. H. Rare Vermont birds, 
216, 503. 
HERSCHEL, J. A singular optical phe- 
nomenon, 704. 
Herschel’s photometric work, 612. 
Hesperomys leucopus, 540, 616, 768. 
oe fly, occurrence of, in America, 
32. 
Heterodon platyrhinos, 254. 
Heynemann, on slugs, 770. 
Hibernating mammals, 7//. 538, 616, 673. 
Hilgard, J. E., on depth of Gulf of Mex- 
ico, 504. 
Hillebrand, W.F., and: Pearce, R., on new 
minerals in Utah, 667. 
Himalayas, ascent of, 743. 
HInpbs, J. I. D. Annual growth of the 
‘tree of heaven,’ 276. 
Hirmoneura, entomography of, 488; ob- 
scura, 488. 
Historical study, scientific method in, 564. 
History, industrial arts as factors in, 597. 
Hodges, S., on after-images, 321. 
Hollick, A., on fossil leaves, 24; on Indian 
implements from Tottenville, 694; on 
Viola, 528. 
Holm, on Danish expedition to East 
Greenland, 286. 
HoumeEs, W. H. Appearance of the cy- 
clone cloud at Rochester, Minn., 1883, 
ill. 304; eccentric figures from southern 
mounds, iil. 436. 
Holub’s explorations, 802. 
Honey-dew, 737. 
Hooker, J., on palnts, 629. 
Hopkinson’s Dynamic electricity, re- 
viewed, 692. 
807 
Hoplia coerulea, 127. 
Hordeum jubatum, 253. 
Horn-eating, 88. 
Hough, G. W., on Dearborn observatory, 
629. 
Houston’s Elements of chemistry, re- 
viewed, 78. 
Houzeau and Lancaster’s Meteorology, 
reviewed, 462. 
Hovas, 341. 
Howarp, W. H. 
cipitation, 302. 
Howe, H. A. The great comet of Sep- 
tember, 1882, 401. 
HowE.u, W.H. The new morphological 
element of the blood, 46. 
Hudson, W. M., on Connecticut oyster- 
beds, 720. 
Human skeleton from Mentone, 7/1. 541; 
skull from Podbaba, 496, i//. 785. 
Humidity, 287. 
Humphreys, Andrew Atkinson, portrait, 
476. 
Hunt, T. S., on crystalline rocks, 503, 574; 
on Taconic question, 675. 
Huro nigricans, 242. 
Huston, H. A. Halos round the raoon, 
115. 
Huston, Sam. Some curious natural 
snowballs, 114. 
Hutchinson, E. 8., on the Pocahontas mine 
disaster, 552. 
Hyalina milium, 236. 
Hyatt, A. The business of the natu- 
ralist, 44; the evolution of the Cephalo- 
poda, 72. 122, 145. 
Hyatt, A., onorigin of cellular tissue, 
337 
ted sunsets and pre- 
Hydraulic method of mining, 465. 
Hydrochelidon lariformis, 216. 
Hydrographic office, work of, 85. 
Hydromechanics, 78. 
Hydrophobia, 744. 
Hygiene, London exhibition of, 744. 
Hyla versicolor, 66. 
Ice banners, 522; crushing strength of, 
367; floes, i//. 585; ropes, 375; zones, 
exploration in, 766. 
Icebergs, ill. 535. 
Iceland, volcanic eruption in, 528. 
IppiInes, J. P. Pumice from Krakatoa, 
144. 
Tijima, Isao, 469. 
Illinois coal-production, reviewed, 490; 
geological report, reviewed, 332; state 
entomologist, twelfth report of, re- 
viewed, 2383; state museum of natural 
history, bulletin of, 525. 
Tllumination, effect of artificial, on health, 
528. 
Illusive memory, 274, 345, 375, 484. 
Indian implements, 7z//. 589, 701; 
Tottenville, 694. 
Indiana glaciology, él. 748. 
Indians, increase of number of, 339; in 
Oregon, 498; relation of mound-build- 
ers to, 658. 
Indicators, comparison of, 725. 
Industrial arts as factors in history, 597. 
Inertia, 482, 559. 
Infusoria flagellata, 337. 
Inheritance of injuries, 144. 
Injuries, inheritance of, 144. 
Ino immunda, 768. 
Inostemma Boscii, 768. 
Inscribed stones from Ohio, 334, 467. 
Insecticide, naphthaline as, 455. 
Insects, 545; as food, 242. 
Instinct, 15. 
Insulating-skin on metal wire, 748. 
Intelligence of batrachians, 66; of snakes, 
253. 
International bureau of weights and meas- 
ures, 305; congress of geologists, 168; 
electrical exhibition, 113; fisheries ex- 
hibition, funds of, 497; geological and 
paleontological journal, 612; meridian 
conference, 773; meteorological station, 
Lena, 742; naturalists’ exchange post, 
558; ornithological congress, 398; polar 
commission, 110; relations, 606; scien- 
tific association, 245. 
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