SCIENCE. — INDEX TO VOLUME VII. 



583 



Criminals, journal devoted to the scien- 

 tific study of, 46. 



Croll's Climate and cosmology, re- 

 viewed, 491. 



Crookshank, E. M., on the cultivation of 

 bacteria. 848. 



Cross-fertilization of plants by birds, 

 ill. 441. 



Crozier, A. A. Evidences of glacial 

 action on the shores of Lake Superior, 

 145. 



Crusoe island, 415. 



Cullum. G. W., on the attack on Wash- 

 ington in 1814, 430. 



Cunningham, K. M. New find of fossil 

 diatoms, 35. 



Currents of the North Sea, 22. 



Curtin, R. G., on Rock}- Mounrain fever, 

 454. 



Cyprus under British rule. 570. 



D. Total-abstinence teaching in the 



schools, 115. 

 D.,A. M. Poison rings, 418: phylloxera, 



307. 



D., W. M. Bishop's ring during solar 

 eclipses, 239; date of vintage, ill. 60; 

 the recent cold wave. ill. 70; winter on 

 Mount Washington, 40. 



Dakota practices, some Ojibwaand, 526. 



Dall. W. H. Distribution of colors in 

 the animal kingdom. 572; Schwatka's 

 Along: Alaska's great river, 308. 



Dall. W. H., on invertebrates, 351. 



Dall's What we really know about 

 Shakspeare, 66. 



Dana, C. L. The nature of so-called 

 double consciousness and triple con- 

 sciousness. 311. 



Dana on nervous diseases, 455. 



Dance of Moquis, 349. 



Danish island, a mythical, 96. 



Danube, a study of the, 96. 



Darton, N. H. The Taconic contro- 

 versy in a nutshell, 78. 



Darwin, O, biography of, 284. 



Davenport tablets, the, 10, 119, 189, ill. 

 437. 



Davidson, Dr. Thomas, memorial to, 323. 



Davis, W. M. A recent ice-storm, 190; 

 a thunder-squall in New England, ill. 

 436; Chinook winds, ill. 55: climate and 

 cosmology, 491 ; currents of the North 

 Sea, 22; sea-level and ocean-currents, 

 146; the festoon cloud. 57. 



Dawson, G. M. Chinook winds. 33; 

 names of the Canadian Rocky Moun- 

 tain peaks, 351. 



Deaf-mutes in the United States, 214. 



Deaf-mutism, congenital, 14. 



Death-rate and sanitation in Russia, 314. 



Death-rates anong college graduates, 

 124; in Alabama, 140. 



Deaths of English scientific men, 282. 



Decapods, 338. 



Deer, hunting of. in New York, 213. 



Deformities of bones among the ancient 

 Peruvians, 130. 



DeLanoye's Rameses the Great, re- 

 viewed. 176. 



Dendroeca Kirtlandi, 536. 



Dentistry, encyclopaedia of. 351. 



Destruction of birds. Ill, 191, 196, 197, 

 199, 201, 202, 204, 205, 241: of eggs of 

 birds for food, 199. 



Dewalque. G.. library of, 525. 



Dewey, J. Inventory of philosophy 

 taught in American colleges, 353. 



Dialects, some local, 72. 



Diamonds, value of. in South Africa, 348. 



Diathermancy of ebonite, 386, 462. 



Diatoms, new find of fossil. 35. 



Dictionary, a new English. 557; of defi- 

 nitions and technical terms, 22. 



Didima on the health-resorts of Mexico, 

 454. 



Diet for the sick, 66. 



Digestion in the human stomach, obser- 

 vations upon, 290. 



Diphtheria, new method of treatment 

 of, 492. 



Disease, bacteria and, 422. 



Diseases, cardiac, 454: nervous, 455; of 

 the fore-brain, 359; of the vine, 569. 



Disinfection by heat, 165; of cattle-cars, 

 316. 



Dobson, W. L., on Tasmania, 523. 

 Dodo, is the, an extinct bird? 145, 168, 



190, 242. 264. 

 Dors, decrease of mad. in Prussia, 412. 

 Douglas, Professor, catalogue prepared 



by, 6. 



Doyle, K. Oil on troubled waters, 77. 

 Draper, J. W., biographical notice of, 



3t<5. 



Drugs, action of, at a distance, 522. 

 DuBois-Reymond, history of natural 



science by, 284. 

 Dun. W. A., on a local weather bureau, 



229. 



Dctcker, W. Destruction of bird-life 

 in the vicinity of New York, 197. 



Dutton, C. E. Crater Lake, Oregon, a 

 proposed national reservation, 179. 



Duval. M., appointment of, to professor- 

 ship of histologj'. 212, 



Dwarfs, giants and, 82. 



E.. O. St. Petersburg letter. 161, 261. 



Ear, sensitiveness of, 570. 



Earthquake at New Orleans, 237; in 

 Chimbo, 117 ; observations, 301 ; record 

 for 1884, 116. 



Earthquakes. 348. 570: in Japan, 237; in 

 New Hampshire, 559. 



Ebonite, diathermancv of, 386, 462. 



Eclipse, solar. 161: of August, 1886, 385. 



Economic discussion, aspects of, 538, 

 572: factor, the state as an, 485, 490. 



Economics, ethics and. 529. 



Economist, a daring, 446. 



Economists, new school of, 361. 



Economy, household, 154. 



Edmands. J. R. A monument to de 

 Saussure, 119. 



Education act of 1869, 138; association of 

 Boston, woman's, 23i, 368, 370: at Ox- 

 ford, medical, 322; geographical, 155; 

 in Holland, primary. 457; in Saxony, 

 industrial, 435; in Texas, industrial, 

 449; movement in St. Petersburg for 

 female medical, 162; physical labora- 

 tory in modern, 573; primary, 449; 

 state, 414. 



Educational books and reports, 153; 

 fund, 370; system, some shortcomings 

 of the present, 138; tendencies in Ja- 

 pan and in America, 2b7. 



Edwards, Thomas, death of, 458. 



Egleston. T., on the decay of building- 

 stone, 93. 



Egyptian exploration, 263. 



Eight-hour day, 59. 



Electrical communication between ves- 

 sels at sea, 52; conditions of the 

 human body, 390; current, 235; exhi- 

 bition at St. Petersburg, 117; furnace, 

 Cowles, 369; installation, 235, 545; 

 light. Franklin institute experiment 

 on, 116; in England, the slow adoption 

 of, 53; lighting, 351 ; domestic, 323; in 

 England. 343; motors for street-rail- 

 ways, 116; railways, 318. 



Electricity employed in physiological 

 investigation. 390. 



Elliott. H. W. Bancroft's History of 

 Alaska. 308. 



Ellis. G. E., on reconstruction of history, 

 431. 



Elmira, reformatory at, 207. 



Ely, R. T. Ethics and economics, 529. 



Encyclopaedia Britannica. 304; the ar- 

 ticle ' Psychology ' in, 514. 



Endowment of research, national, 284, 

 307, 374. 



Engineering, study of, at University of 

 London. 235; tripos at Cambridge, 

 Eng., 282. 



Engineers' club, Philadelphia, 370; con- 

 vention at Cleveland, 1. 



England, colonies of, 475; electric light- 

 ing in. 343; low temperatures in, 281. 



English biology, losses to, during 1885, 

 31; dictionary, a new, 557; fishery 



board, proposed, 344, 431 : public 

 schools, science in, 31 ; scientific men, 

 deaths of, 282; society for psychical 

 research, attack on the theosophical 

 report of, 156; sparrow, 14, 35, 80. 



Ensilage commissioners, report of, 545; 

 congress in New York, 99. 



Entomology, summer course in, at Cor- 

 nell, 415. 



Ephemerides for amateur astronomers. 



237. 



Epidemics in Paris during 1884, 521. 

 Epilepsy, 533. 



Equality in ability of the young of the 

 human species, 36, 80. 



Equatorial currents in star and plane- 

 tary atmospheres, 13. 



Equus fauna, 3S6 ; geologic age of, 369. 



Errata, 484. 



Eruption of Mount Etna. 237. 



Eskimo building-snow, ill. 54, 372, 396; 

 East Greenland, 172. 



Ethics and economics, 529; and philoso- 

 phy, Sage professorship of, at Cornell 

 university, 74 



Ethnological collections of British mu- 

 seum, 436. 



Euphrates valley. 470. 



European colonies and their trade, 275. 



Evolution and the faith, 483; of lan- 

 guage, 555: of the horses, some points 

 in the, ill. 13. 



Exhibition, colonial and Indian, at 

 London. 478: for small industries, 569; 

 international maritime, 434; of appli- 

 ances for geographical education, 53. 



Expedition to Alaska, new, 566. 



Exploration, Egyptian, 263. 



Explorations in Greenland, hydrograph- 

 ic, 409: in the Atlantic, deep-sea. 570. 



Explosions in coal-mines, 346, 3S9; means 

 of preventing. 29. 



Explosive, new. 371. 



Exposition in Washington, proposed 

 permanent, 186; international horti- 

 cultural. 186. 



Extraordinary structure, a most, 572. 



Eyes, diseased, 514. 



Eyesight of Amherst students, 414. 



Faith, evolution and the. 483. 



Famine, fish and, in India, 125. 



Farnsworth, P. J. Equality in ability 

 of the young of the human species, 80. 



Fat in animals, origin of, 444. 



Faye, H. Is the ocean surface de- 

 pressed ? 421. 



Ferrel, W. Note on the nocturnal cool- 

 ing of bodies, 329 ; sea-level and ocean- 

 currents, 75, 187; the temperature of 

 the moon, 32, 122. 



Field. C. Settlement of labor differ- 

 ences, 372: the silver problem, 286. 



Fire, a well-banked, 304. 



Fish and famine in India, 125: commis- 

 sion, English. 323; destruction of, by 

 the cold weather in Florida. 139; in 

 Connecticut, shell. 59: poisonous, 411. 



Fish-cultural station at Gloucester, 

 Mass., 1*2. 



Fisher's Outlines of Universal history, 

 reviewed, 246. 



Fisheries board of Great Britain, pro- 

 posed, 341, 431 ; French sea. 457; injury 

 to, by sewage. 458; Massachusetts in- 

 land. 89; interests, American, 113; 

 English, 479; of Newfoundland, seal, 

 413. 



Fishes, naturalization of. in Tasmanian 

 waters, 44; significance of the term, 

 295. 



Fletcher. Alice C. Composite portraits 

 of American Indians, *'//. 408. 



Flint. Austin, death of, 263. 



Flooding the Sahara, maps, 542. 



Flood Rock explosion. Gieneral Abbott's 

 report on the, 25. 



Florida , cold weather in. 415; destruction 

 of fish by, 139. 



Flowers, fruits, and leaves. 549. 



Food-accessories: their influence on di- 

 gestion, 312. 



