INDEX to VOL. LXXVI. (B) 
Address at Anniversary, November 30, 1904 (Huggins), 1. 
Adie (J. R.) and Alcock (A.) On the Occurrence of Anopheles (Myzomyia) Listont in 
Calcutta, 319. 
Adrenalin, synthesis of substance allied to (Dakin), 491 ; —— physiological activity of 
substances related to (Dakin), 498. 
Alcock (A.) See Adie and Alcock. 
Anopheles Listoni in Calcutta (Adie and Alcock), 319. 
Apospory, cytology of (Digby), 463. 
Arber (E. A. N.) On some New Species of Lagenostoma, a Type of Pteridospermous 
Seed from the Coal Measures, 245. 
Armstrong (E. F.) Studies on Enzyme Action. VII.—The Synthetic Action of Acids 
contrasted with that of Enzymes. Synthesis of Maltose and Isomaltose, 592 ; 
VIII.—The Mechanism of Fermentation, 600. 
Armstrong (H. E.) Studies on Enzyme Action.—Lipase, 606. 
Assheton (R.) The Morphology of the Ungulate Placenta, particularly the Development 
of that Organ in the Sheep, 393. | 
Assimilation and respiration, vegetable (Blackman and Matthaei), 402. 
Atmospheric carbon dioxide, new method for determining (Brown and Escombe), 112. 
Auld (S. J. M.) See Henry and Auld. 

Barratt (J. O. W.) The Phagocytosis of Red Blood-cells, 524. 
Bastian (H. C.) On the Occurrence of Certain Ciliated Infusoria within the Eggs of - 
a Rotifer, considered from the Point of View of Heterogenesis, 385. 
Bateson (W.) and Gregory (R. P.) On the Inheritance of Heterostylism in Primula, 
581. 
Bikhaconitine, pharmacology of (Cash and Dunstan), 468. 
Blackman (F. F.) and Matthaei (G. L. C.) Experimental Researches in Vegetable 
Assimilation and Respiration. IV.—A Quantitative Study of Carbon-Dioxide 
Assimilation and Leaf-Temperature in Natural Illumination, 402. 
Brown (H. T.) and Escombe (F.) Onthe Variations in the Amount of Carbon Dioxide in 
the Air of Kew during the Years 1898-1891, 118 ; On a New Method for the 
Determination of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide, based on the Rate of its Absorption by 
a Free Surface of a Solution of Caustic Alkali, 112 ; Researches on some of the 
Physiological Processes of Green Leaves, with special Reference to the Interchange of 
Energy between the Leaf and its Surroundings, 29 ; and Wilson (W. E.) On 
the Thermal Emissivity of a Green Leaf in Still and Moving Air, 122. 
Burch (G. J.) On Colour-Vision by very Weak Light, 199. 



Cancer, absence or diminution of hydrochloric acid in stomach, wherever growth situated 
(Moore), 138 ; resemblances between ‘“ Plimmer’s Bodies” and normal con- 
stituents of reproductive cells (Farmer, Moore, and Walker), 230. 

