INDEX to VOL. XL. 



ABNEY (Capt.), comparative effects of 

 different parts of the spectrum on 

 silver salts, 251. 



■ and Maj.-G-en. Festing, colour 



photometry — Bakerian lecture, 238. 



intensity of radiation through 



turhid media, 378. 



Air, the carbonic acid, organic matter, 

 and micro-organisms in, more especi- 

 ally of dwellings and schools (Carnel- 

 ley, Haldane, and Anderson), 566. 



■ the coefficient of viscosity of 



(Tomlinson), 40. 



the determination of organic? matter 



in (Carnelley and Mackie), 566. 



the distribution of micro-organisms 



in (Frankland), 509. 



Amniota, remarks on the cloaca and on 

 the copulatory organs of the (Gradow), 

 266. 



Anderson (A. M.), J. S. Haldane, and 

 T. Carnelley, the carbonic acid, organic 

 matter, and micro-organisms in air, 

 more especially of dwellings and 

 schools, 566. 



Andrews (T.) on the properties of 

 matter in the gaseous and liquid states 

 under various conditions of tempera- 

 ture and pressure, 254. 



observations on pure ice and snow, 



544. 



Ansdell (G\) and J. Dewar, on the 

 gaseous constituents of meteorites, 

 549. 



Arc lighting, on fluted craterless carbons 

 for (Douglass), 500. 



Armstrong (H. E.), electrolytic conduc- 

 tion in relation to molecular composi- 

 tion, valency, and the nature of 

 chemical change : being an attempt 

 to apply a theory of 'residual 

 affinity,' 268. 



Bakerian lecture (Abney and Festing), 

 238. 



Bayliss (W. M.) and J. R. Bradford, 

 the electrical phenomena accompany- 

 ing the process of secretion in the 

 salivary glands of the dog and cat, 



. 203. 



Beevor (C. E.) and V. Horsley, a minute 

 analysis (experimental) of the various 

 movements produced by stimulating 

 in the monkey different regions of the 

 cortical centre for the xipper limb as 

 defined by Professor Ferrier, 475. 



Bell (C. A.) on the sympathetic vibra- 

 tions of jets, 368. 



Bidwell (Shelford) on the changes pro- 

 duced by magnetisation in the length 

 of rods of iron, steel, and nickel, 109. 



on the changes produced by mag- 

 netisation in the length of iron wires 

 under tension, 257. 



on the lifting power of electro- 

 magnets and the magnetisation of 

 iron, 486. 



admitted, 471. 



Blood, on the coagulation of the blood 

 — Croonian lecture (Wooldridge), 320. 



Bombay, on the luni-solar variations of 

 magnetic declination and horizontal 

 force at, and of declination at Trevan- 

 drum (Chambers), 316. 



Bottomley (J. T.) on an apparatus for 

 connecting and disconnecting a re- 

 ceiver under exhaustion by a mercurial 

 pump, 249. 



Brachial plexus, the minute anatomy of 

 the (Herringham) , 255. 



Bradford (J. E.) and W. M. Bayliss, 

 the electrical phenomena accompany- 

 ing the process of secretion in the 

 salivary glands of the dog and cat, 

 203. 



Brown (J. G.), C. S. Sherrington, and 

 C. S. Roy, preliminary report on the 

 pathology of Cholera Asiatica (as 

 observed in Spain, 1885), 566. 



Buchanan (J.), a general theorem in 

 electrostatic induction, with applica- 

 tion of it to the origin of electrifica- 

 tion by friction, 416. 



Buller (Walter L.) admitted, 362. 



Calculus of variations, on the discrimi- 

 nation of maxima and minima solu- 

 tions in the (Culverwell) , 476. 



Callendar (H. L.) on the practical 

 measurements of temperature, 566. 



