INDEX to VOL. LXXXIV. (B) 



AcetylmethylcarbiDol, bacterial production of (Harden and Norris), 492. 

 Acquired characters, investigation of instance of transmission of (Brown), 555. 

 Address of the President (Geikie), 435. 



Adsorption as preliminary to chemical reaction (Bayliss), 81. 



Agglutination, factors concerned in (Dean), 416. 



Alcyonaria, type of new family of (Hickson), 195. 



A.makebe, transmission by Rhipicephalus (Theiler), 112. 



Antelope infected with Trypanosoma gambiense (Fraser and Duke), 484. 



Arber (E. A. N.) On the Fossil Flora of the Forest of Dean Coalfield and the Eelation- 



ships of the Coalfields of the West of England and South Wales, 543. 

 Armstrong (H. E. and E. F.) The Origin of Osmotic Effects. IV. — Note on the 



Differential Septa in Plants with reference to the Translocation of Nutritive 



Materials, 226 ; and Horton (E.) Herbage Studies. I. — Lotus corniculatus, a 



Cyanophoric Plant, 471. 

 Astrosclera willeyana, Lister, note on (Kirkpatrick), 579. 



Bacillus cloacce, chemical action of, on glucose, etc. (Thompson), 500. 

 Bacteria, influence of ionised air on (Thornton), 280. 



Bacterial and other cells, method of disintegrating (Barnard and Hewlett), 57. 

 Barnard (J. E.) and Hewlett (E. T.) On a Method of Disintegrating Bacterial and other 

 Organic Cells, 57. 



Barratt (J. O. W.) Fractional Withdrawal of Complement and Amboceptor by Means 

 of Antigen (Preliminary Note), 277. 



Bateson (W.) See Vilmorin and Bateson ; and Punnett (E. C.) On the Inter- 



relations of Genetic Factors, 3. 



Bayliss (W. M.) The Properties of Colloidal Systems. II.— On Adsorption as 



Preliminary to Chemical Eeaction, 81 ; III. — The Osmotic Pressure of 



Electrolytically Dissociated Colloids, 229. 



Beddoe (J.) Obituary notice of, xxv. 



Blood, action of radium on constituents of (Chambers and Euss), 124 ; new method 



for total volume of (Todd and White), 255. 

 Blood corpuscles, fate of red, injected into circulation, etc. (Todd and White), 255. 

 Blood volume of mammals and relation to surface area of body (Dreyer and Eay), 460. 

 Bottomley (W. B.) The Structure and Physiological Significance of the Eoot-uodules of 



Myrica gale, 215. 

 Boyce (Sir E.) Obituary notice of, iii. 



Brain, motor localisation in gibbon's (Mott, Schuster, and Sherrington), 67. 



Brown (T. G.) The Intrinsic Factors in the Act of Progression in the Mammal, 308 ; 



An Alleged Specific Instance of the Transmission of Acquired Characters. — 



Investigation and Criticism, 555. 

 Bruce (Sir D.) The Morphology of Trypanosoma evansi (Steel), 181 ; The 



Morphology of Trypanosoma gambiense (Dutton), 327. 

 Buchanan (G.) Note on Developmental Forms of Trypanosoma brucei (pecaudi) in the 



Internal Organs, etc., of the Gerbil (Gerbillus pygargus\ 161. 

 Buckmaster (G. A.) and Gardner (J. A.) Ventilation of the Lung during Chloroform 

 ■ Narcosis, 347. 



