INDEX. 



Xlll 



Light, action of, on Bacillus antJiracis 

 (Ward), 23. 



Lurnbo-sacral plexus of Macacus rhesus* 

 an experimental investigation of the 

 nerve roots which enter into the 

 formation of the (Russell), 459. 



Lydall (F.), J. Hopkinson, and E. 

 Wiison, magnetic viscosity, 352. 



Macacus rhesus* an experimental in- 

 vestigation of the nerve roots which 

 enter into the formation of the 

 lumbo-sacral plexus of (Russell), 

 459. 



— sinicus, a further minute ana- 

 lysis by electric stimulation of the so- 

 called motor region (facial area) of 

 the cortex cerebri in (Beevor and 

 Horsley), 463. 



Macdonald (J. D.) analogy of sound 

 and colour. Comparison of the seven 

 colours of the rainbow with the seven 

 notes of the musical scale, as deter- 

 mined by the monochord, and of the 

 wave-lengths of colour and sound, 

 375. {Title only.) 



MacMunn (C. A.) and J". T. Cunning- 1 

 ham, on the coloration of the skins of 

 fishes, especially of Pleuronectidse, 

 384. 



Mac William (J. A.) on the influence 

 exercised by the central nervous 

 system on the cardiac rhjthm, with 

 an enquiry into the action of chloro- 

 form on that rhythm, 464. 



Madura disease (mycetoma) upon the 

 existence of more than one fungus in 

 (Boyce and Surveyor), 110. 



Magnetic viscosity (Hopkinson, Wilson, 

 and Lydall), 352. 



Mechanical equivalent of heat, value of 

 the, deduced from some experiments 

 performed with the view of establish- 

 ing the relation between the elec- 

 trical and mechanical units (Griffiths), 

 6. 



Metals, the effects of mechanical stress 



on the electrical resistance of (Gray 



and Henderson), 76. 

 Meteoric stone found at Makariwa, 



near Invercargill, New Zealand, on a 



(Ulrich), 54. 

 Mimetic forms of certain butterflies of 



the genus Hypolimnas* on the (Swin- 



hoe), 47. 



Monochord, comparison of the seven 

 colours of the rainbow, with the seven 

 notes of the musical scale, as deter- 

 mined by the (Macdonald), 375. 

 {Title only.) 



Motor region (facial area) of the cortex 

 cerebri in the monkey, a further 



minute analysis by electric stimula- 

 tion of the so-called (Beevor and 

 Horsley), 463. 



Muscles, further experimental note on 

 the correlation of action of antago- 

 nistic (Sherrington), 407. 



Mycetoma (Madura disease), upon the 

 existence of more than one fungus in 

 (Boyce and Surveyor), 110. 



Nerve roots which enter into the form- 

 ation of the lumbo-sacral plexus of 

 Macacus rhesus, an experimental in- 

 vestigation of the (Russell), 459. 



Newsholme (A.) and Gr. King, on the 

 alleged increase of cancer, 405. 



Obituary notice of Fellow deceased : — 



Thomson, James, i. 

 Ophthalmometer, on a portable (Reid), 



1. 



Orientation of a number of Greek tem- 

 ples, on the results of an examination 

 of the (Penrose), 379. 



Oximides, organic, a research on their 

 pharmacology (Pomfret), 398. 



Oxygen absorption lines, Great A, Great 

 B, and a of the solar spectrum, on 

 the geometrical construction of the 

 (Higgs), 110. {Title only.) 



Pathology among biological studies, the 

 position of. — Croonian lecture (Vir- 

 chow), 114. 



Penrose (F. C.) on the results of an 

 examination of the orientation of a 

 number of Greek temples, with a 

 view to connect these angles with the 

 amplitudes of certain stars at the time 

 these temples were founded, and an 

 endeavour to derive therefrom the 

 dates of their foundation by consider- 

 ation of the changes produced upon 

 the right ascension and declination of 

 the stars arising from the precession 

 of the equinoxes, 379. 



Pleuronectidse, on the coloration of the 

 skins of fishes, especially of (Cun- 

 ningham and MacMunn), 384. 



Pomfret (H. W.) organic oximides : a 

 research on their pharmacology, 398. 



Potential of an anchor ring, the (Dyson) , 

 372. 



Presents, lists of, 45, 52, 78, 112, 160, 

 376, 391, 427, 485. 



Prestwich (J.) on the evidences of a 

 submergence of Western Europe and 

 of the Mediterranean coasts at the 

 close of the glacial or so-called post- 

 glacial period, and immediately pre- 

 ceding the neolithic or recent period, 

 80. 



C 2 



