596 



INDEX. 



chemical results of experiments on the 

 mixed herbage of permanent meadow, 

 conducted for more than twenty years 

 in succession on the same land : 

 Part II. The botanical results, 556. 



Gladstone (J. H.) and A. Tribe, the 

 aluminium iodine reaction, 545. 



Glycerine barometer, on the construction 

 of a (Jordan), 105. 



Godwin- Austen (Lieut. -Col. H. H.), 

 elected, 468 ; admitted, 469. 



Gore (G.), on the capillary electroscope, 

 32. 



chemico-electric relations of metals 



in solutions of salts of potassium, 38. 



effects of electric cm^rents on the 



surfaces of mutual contact of aqueous 

 solutions, 322. 



Graves (Right Rev. C, Bishop of 

 Limerick), elected, 468. 



Greenfield (W. S.), preliminary note on 

 some points in the pathology of 

 anthrax, with especial reference to the 

 modification of the properties of the 

 Bacillus anthracis by cultivation, and 

 to the protective influence of inocula- 

 tion with a modified virus, 557. 



Gyroscope, on an electro -magnetic (de 

 Eonvielle), 305. 



Hannay (J. B.) on the artificial forma- 

 tion of the diamond, 188, 450. 



on the state of fluids at their criti- 

 cal temperatures, 478. 



on the solubilitv of solids in gases : 



II, 484. 



and J. Hogarth on the solubility 



of solids in gases, 178. 



Haughton (Rev. Samuel) the Croonian 

 Lecture. — On some elementary prin- 

 ciples in animal mechanics : No. IX. 

 The relation between the maximum 

 work done, the time of lifting, and 

 the weights lifted by the arms, 219. 



on some elementary principles in 



animal mechanics : No, X. Further 

 illustrations of the "Law of Fatigue," 

 359. 



Heart and arteries, on the tonicity of the 

 (GaskeU) ; 225. 



Heer (0») on the Miocene plants dis- 

 covered on the Mackenzie River, 560. 



Heron (J,) and H. T. Brown, some 

 observations upon the hydrolytic fer- 

 ments of the pancreas and small intes- 

 tine, 393. 



Histology of Hydra fu$ca> on the 



(Parker), 61. 

 Hogarth (J.) and J. B. Hannay on the 



solubility of solids in gases, 178. 

 Huggins (William) on the photographic 



spectra of stars, 20 . 



Huggins (William) on the spectrum of 



the flame of hydrogen, 576. 

 Hughes (D. E.), elected, 468; admitted, 



469. 



Huxley (T. H.) on the epipubis of the 



dog and fox, 162. 

 Hydra fusca, on the histology of 



(Parker), 61. 

 Hydrogen, note on the spectrum of 



(Lockyer), 31. 

 on the spectrum of the flame of 



(Huggins), 576. 

 Hydrolitic ferments of the pancreas and 



small intestine, some observations on 



the (Brown and Heron), 393. 



Induction of electric currents in infinite 

 plates and spherical shells, on the 

 (Niven), 113. 



Induction coil, on some of the effects 

 produced by an, with a De Meritens 

 magneto-electric machine (Spottis- 

 woode), 173. 



Influence of electric light upon vegeta- 

 tion, on the (Siemens), 210. 



some further observations on the 



(Siemens), 293. 



Inoculation, protective influence of, with 

 a modified virus (Greenfield), 557. 



Integrals, on certain definite, No. 6 

 (Russell), 100. 



No. 7 (Russell), 103. 



Invertebrate fluids, on the so-called 

 coagulation of (Geddes), 252. 



Iron wires, on certain effects of stress on 

 soft (Ewing), 510. 



Jeffery (H. M.), elected, 468 ; admitted, 

 469. 



Jordan (James B.) on the construction 

 of a glycerine barometer, 105. 



Lankester (E. R.),note on the discovery 

 of a fresh water medusa of the order 

 TrachomedusaB, 554. 



Lawes (J. B.), J. H. Gilbert, and M. T. 

 Masters, agricultural) botanical, and 

 chemical results of experiments on the 

 mixed herbage of permanent meadow, 

 conducted for more than twenty years 

 in succession on the same land : 

 Part II. The botanical results, 556. 



Liquid annulus, on the spontaneous seg- 

 mentation of a (Worthington), 49. 



Liveing (G. D.) and J. Dewar, on the 

 spectra of magnesium and lithium, 93. 



— on the spectra of the com; 



pounds of carbon with hydrogen and 

 nitrogen, 152. 



note on the history of the 



carbon spectrum, 490. 



on the spectra of the com- 



