.526 



INDEX. 



Etiology of scarlet fever, the, (Klein), 

 158. 



Evans (P. N.) and R. Anschiitz, contri- 

 butions to our knowledge of antimony 

 pentachloride, 379. 



Evaporation and dissociation. Part Y. 

 A study of the thermal properties of 

 methyl alcohol (Ramsay and Young) , 

 37. 



Ewart (J. C.) on rigor mortis in fish 



and its relation to putrefaction, 438. 

 Ewing (James Alfred), elected, 352. 

 admitted, 352. 



and W. Low, on the magnetisation 



of iron in strong fields, 200. 



Explosion, a coal-dust (Galloway). 174. 



Explosive wave, on the induction of the, 

 and an altered gaseous condition in 

 an explosive gaseous mixture by a 

 vibratory movement (Wright), 472. 



Fellows elected, 16, 352. 



Figures of equilibrium of rotating 

 masses of fluid, on (Darwin), 359. 



Fish, on rigor mortis in, and its relation 

 to putrefaction (Ewart), 438. 



Fitzgerald (G-. F.), on the thermo- 

 dynamic properties of substances 

 whose intrinsic equation is a linear 

 function of the pressure and tempera- 

 ture, 50. 



Clausius's formula for the change 



of state from liquid to gas applied to 

 Messrs. Ramsay and Young's obser- 

 vations on alcohol, 216. 



Fluid, on figures of equilibrium of rota- 

 ting masses of, (Darwin), 359. 



Forbes (George), elected, 352. 



• admitted, 352. 



- a thermal telephone transmitter, 



141. 



Frankland (G. C.) and P. F. Frankland, 

 studies of some new micro-organisms 

 obtained from air, 150. 



Frankland (P. F.) and T. G. Hart, fur- 

 ther experiments on the distribution of 

 micro-organisms in air (by Hesse's 

 method), 267. 



■Galloway (W.), a coal-dust explosion, 

 174. 



•Gardiner (W.) and T. Ito on the 

 structure of the mucilage cells of 

 Blechnum occiclentale (L.) and Os- 

 munda regalis (L.), 353. 



Gaseous states of matter, preliminary 

 note on the continuity of tbe liquid 

 and (Ramsay and Young), 3. 



Gases, experiments on the discharge of 

 electricitv through ; second paper 

 (Schuster), 371. 



on the dissociation of some, by 



the electric discharge — Bakerian lec- 

 ture (Thomson), 343. 



Gasterolichenes, on, a new type of the 

 group Lichenes (Massee), 370. 



Gilbert (J. H.) and Sir J. B. Lawes on the 

 present position of the question of the 

 sources of the nitrogen of vegetation, 

 with some new results, and prelimin- 

 ary notice of new lines of investigation, 

 483. 



Gladstone (J. H.), dispersion equiva- 

 lents. Part I, 401. 



Gotch (F.) , the electromotive properties 

 of the electrical organ of Torpedo 

 marmorata, 357. 



Gowers (William Richard) elected, 352. 



admitted, 352. 



Griffiths (A. B.) on the nephridia and 

 'liver' of Patella vulgata, 392. 



Haldane (J. S.) and T. Carnelley, the 



air of sewers, 394, 501. 

 Halliburton (W. D.) on muscle plasma, 



400. 



Halsbury (Lord) elected, 16. 



admitted, 35. 



Hamilton's numbers, on (Sylvester and 

 Hammond), 470. 



Hammond (J.) and J. J. Sylvester on 

 Hamilton's numbers, 470. 



Hardman (E. T.), note on Professor 

 Hull's paper, 308. 



Harmonic components, on the computa- 

 tion of the, of a series representing a 

 phenomenon recurring in daily and 

 yearly periods (Strachey), 61. 



Hart (T. G.) and P. F. Frankland, 

 further experiments on the distribu- 

 tion of micro-organisms in air (by 

 Hesse's method), 267. 



Haughton (Rev. S.), a geometrical inter- 

 pretation of the first two periods of 

 chemical elements following hydrogen, 

 showing the relations of the fourteen 

 elements to each other and to hydro- 

 gen by means of a right line and 

 cubic curve with one real asymptote, 

 482. 



Heart and pulse, note on the functions 

 of the sinuses of Valsalva and auri- 

 cular appendices with some remarks 

 on the mechanism of the (Collier), 

 469. 



Heat in liquids, conduction of (Chree), 

 300. 



Hennessy (H.), problems in mechanism 

 regarding trains of pulleys and drums 

 of least weight for a given velocity 

 ratio, 134. 



second note on the geometrical 



construction of the cell of the honey 

 bee,. 176. 



