INDEX, 



515 



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

 electrolysis of dilute sulphuric acid 

 and other hydrated salts, 215. 



Gland cells of Dioncsa muscipula, on the 

 changes in the, during secretion 

 (Gardiner), 180. 



Glass, on the relation between the elec- 

 trical qualities and the chemical com- 

 position of (Gray and Dobbie), 488. 



Gordon (J. E. H.), correction to a paper 

 " On the determination of Verdet's 

 Constant," published in the " Phil. 

 Trans.," 1877, 4. 



Gore (G.) on some relations of chemical 

 corrosion to voltaic current, 331. 



some relations of heat to voltaic 



and thermo-electric action of metals 

 in electrolytes, 50. 



Government grant of £4,000, account 

 of the appropriation of the, 83. 



"Governor-General Loudon" (steam- 

 ship), extract from the logbook of, 

 relating to the volcanic outbursts in 

 the Sunda Strait, 199. 



Grant (Government) of £4,000, account 

 of the appropriation of the, 83. 



Grants from the Donation Fund, account 

 of, 86. 



Granular substances, determination of 

 the vertical and lateral pressures of 

 (Roberts), 225. 



Gray (T. and A.) and J. J. Dobbie on 

 the relation between the electrical 

 qualities and the chemical composi- 

 tion of glass and allied substances. 

 Part I, 488. 



— on a new reflecting galvano- 

 meter of great sensibility, and on new 

 forms of astatic galvanometers, 287. 



Grubb (Howard) admitted, 1. 



Hall's phenomenon, on an explanation 

 of (Bid well), 341. 



Hamilton (D. J.) on the structure and 

 functional significance of the human 

 corpus callosum, 349. 



Hartley (W. N.), remarks on the atomic 

 weight of beryllium, 462. 



researches in spectrum photo- 

 graphy in relation to new methods of 

 quantitative chemical analysis. Part 

 II, 421. 



Haycraft (J. B.) on the action of a 

 secretion obtained from the medicinal 

 leech, on the coagulation of the blood, 

 478. 



Heat, some relations of, to voltaic and 



thermo-electric action of metals in 



electrolytes (Gore), 50. 

 Heath (R. S.) on the dynamics of a 



rigid body in elliptic space, 219. 

 Heating effects of electric currents, on 



the (Preece), 464. 



Herring ova, on the natural and arti- 

 ficial fertilisation of (Ewart), 450. 



Hill (M. J. M.) on the motion of fluid, 

 part of which is moving rotationally 

 and part irrotationally, 276. 



Horsley (Victor) and E. A. Schafer, 

 experimental researches in cerebral 

 physiology, 437. 



Hughes (D. E.) on a magnetic balance, 

 and experimental researches made 

 therewith, 167. 



magnetic polarity and neutrality. 



405. 



Hughes' magnetic balance, note on the 

 theory of the (Thompson), 319. 



Human skeleton, description of parts of 

 a, from a pleistocene (palaeolithic) 

 bed, Tilbury, Essex (Owen), 136. 



Illumination, on a new standard of 

 (Preece), 270. 



Kendall (J. A.) on a new method of 



generating electricity, 208. 

 Kew Committee, report of the, 87. 

 Kronecker (Leopold) elected, 225. 

 ■ admitted, 488. 



Kundt's tubes, on the circulation of air 

 observed in (Rayleigh), 10. 



Lachrymal bone, human, notes on the 

 varieties and morphology of the, and 

 its accessory ossicles (Macalister), 447. 



Lea (S.) on a "rennet" ferment con- 

 tained in the seeds of Withania coa- 

 gulans, 55. 



Leaf, preliminary note on the apex of 

 the, in Osmunda and Todea (Bower), 

 442. 



Leech, on the action of a secretion 

 obtained from the medicinal, on the 

 coagulation of the blood (Haycraft), 

 478. 



Lesions of different regions of the 

 cerebral hemispheres (Ferrier and 

 Yeo), 222. 



Life history of the dock iEcidium 

 {JEcidium riimicis, Schlecht) (Plow- 

 right), 47. 



Light, on the measurement of (Preece), 

 270. 



on the amount of, reflected by me- 

 tallic surfaces, No. 2 (Conroy), 187. 



List of fellows deceased since last anni- 

 versarv, 59. 



of presents, 111, 253, 353, 500. 



Liveing (G. D.) and J. Dewar, spectro- 

 scopic studies on gaseous explosions. 

 No. I, 471. 



Lockyer (J. N.) on the most widened 

 lines in sun-spot spectra. 1st and 2nd 

 Series, November 12, 1879, to October 

 15, 1881, 443. 



b 2 



