INDEX. 



499 



discharge with the chloride of silver 

 battery. Part IV, 292. 



Deviations of the standard compass, on 

 the changes which take place in the, in 

 the iron armour-plated, iron, and com- 

 posite-built ships of the Koyal Navy 

 on a considerable change of magnetic 

 latitude (Creak), 77. 



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

 the absorption of ultra-violet rays by 

 various substances, 7.1. 



note on the order of reversi- 

 bility of the lithium lines, 76. 



note on the reversal of hydro- 

 gen lines ; and on the outburst of 

 hydrogen lines when water is dropped 

 into the arc, 74. 



and A. Scott on the atomic 



weight of manganese, 44. 



on the molecular weights of 



the substituted ammonias. No. I. 

 Triethylamine, 347. 



Dilator nerve of the iris, note on the 

 (Ferrier), 229. 



Donaldson (F.), Jr., and W. H. Howell, 

 experiments upon the heart of the 

 dog, 271. 



Drilled holes, on curves circumscribing 

 rotating polygons with reference to 

 the shape of (Mallock), 319. 



Earth's rotation, the cause of an apparent 

 change in the time of (Stone), 135. 



Eclipse of May 17, 1882, on the total 

 polar (Schuster and Abney), 151. 



Election, list of candidates for, 66. 



■ selected candidates for, 178. 



of Fellows, 275. 



Electric discharge with the chloride of 

 silver battery, experimental researches 

 on the. Part IV (De La Rue and 

 Miiller), 292. 



Electrical motions in a spherical con- 

 ductor (Lamb), 130. 



resistance of carbon contacts (Bid- 

 well), 1. 



stimulation of the frog's heart, 



on the effect of, and its modifi- 

 cation by heat, cold, and the action of 

 drugs (Brunton and Cash), 455. 



Electromagnetic unit of electricity, on 

 the determination of the number of 

 electrostatic units in the (Thomson), 

 346. 



Electromotive force and resistance of 

 batteries, the effects of temperature 

 on the (Preece), 48, 250. 



Electrostatic units, on the determination 

 of the number of, in the electro- 

 magnetic unit of electricity (Thomson) , 

 346. 



Examination of the dark glasses and 

 mirrors of sextants, apparatus em- 

 VOL. XXXV. 



ployed for, at the Kew Observatory 

 (Whipple), 42. 



Experimental inquiry into the composi- 

 tion of some of the animals fed and 

 slaughtered as human food. Sup- 

 plement : composition of the ash of 

 the entire animals, and of certain sepa- 

 rated parts (Lawes and Gilbert} , 342. 



Experiments on metallic reflection. 

 No. 3. On the amount of light re- 

 flected by metallic surfaces (Conroy), 

 26. 



Eyes of Arthropoda, on the structure and 

 functions of (Lowne), 140. 



Faeroe Channel, remarks on the sound- 

 ings and temperatures obtained in the, 

 during the summer of 1882 (H.M.S. 

 "Triton") (Tizard), 202. 



Fellows, election of, 275. 



Ferrier (D.), note on the motor roots of 

 the brachial plexus, and on the dilator 

 nerve of the iris, 229. 



Festing (Colonel) and Captain Abney, 

 atmospheric absorption in the infra- 

 red of the solar spectrum, 80. 



influence of water in the 



atmosphere on the solar spectrum 

 and solar temperature, 328. 



Flight (W.), examination of the meteo- 

 rite which fell on the 16th February, 

 1883, at Alfianello, in the district of 

 Verolannova, in the province of 

 Brescia, Italy, 258. 



Food, composition of the ash of some 

 animals fed and slaughtered as human 

 (Lawes and Gilbert), 342. 



contributions to the chemistry of 



(Bell), 161. 



Foraminifera, researches on the. Sup- 

 plemental : an abyssal type of the 

 genus Orbitolites (Carpenter), 276. 



Frankland (E.), contribution to the 

 chemistry of storage batteries, 67. 



Frog and newt, on the action of certain 

 reagents upon the coloured blood- 

 corpuscles of the (Stirling and 

 Bannie), 114. 



G-ardiner (W.) on the continuity of the 

 protoplasm through the walls of vege- 

 table cells, 163. 



Garrod (A. B.) on the formation of 

 uric acid in the animal economy and 

 its relation to hippuric acid, 63. 



Gilbert (J. H.) and Sir J. B. Lawes, 

 supplement to former paper entitled 

 " Experimental inquiry into the com- 

 position of some of the animals fed 

 and slaughtered as human food : " 

 composition of the ash of the entire 

 animals, and of certain separated 

 parts, 342. 



