441 
LUND. 
INDEX. 
M ‘NEILL. 
Lund, Dr., on skulls found in Bra- 
zilian caves, i. 218. 
Lungs, enlargement of, in the Que- j 
chua and Aymara Indians, i. 119; | 
a modified swim-bladder, i. 207 ; : 
different capacity of in races of 
man, i. 216. 
Luminosity in insects, i. 345. 
Luschka, Prof., on the termination 
of the coccyx, i. 30. 
Lust, instinct of, i. 89. ! 
Luxury, comparatively innocuous, i. 
171. 
Lycsena^ sexual differences of colour- 
ing in species of, i. 390. 
Lyell, Sir C., on the antiquity of 
man, i. 3 ; on the origin of man, i. 
4 ; on the parallelism of the de- 
velopment of species and languages, 
i. 59 ; on the extinction of lan- 
guages, i. 60 ; on the Inquisition, i. 
178 ; on the fossil remains of ver- 
tebrata, i. 201 ; on the fertility of 
mulattoes, i. 221. 
Lynx, Canadian, throat-ruff of the, 
ii. 267. 
Lyre-bird, assemblies of, ii. 101. 
M. 
Macacus, ears of, i. 23; convoluted 
body in the extremity of the tail 
of, i. 30 ; variability of the tail in 
species of, i. 150 ; whiskers of 
species of, ii. 283. 
Macacus cynomolgus, superciliary 
ridge of, ii. 318 ; beard and whis- 
kers of, becoming white with age, 
ii. 319. 
Macacus inornatus, i. 151. 
Macacus lasiotus, facial spots of, ii. 308. ‘ 
Macacus radiatus, i. 192. 
Macacus rhesus^ sexual difference in 
the colour of, ii. 293, 310. 
Macalister, Prof, on variations of 
the palmar is accessorius muscle, i. 
109 ; on muscular abnormalities in 
man, i. 128, 129 ; on the greater 
variability of the muscles in men 
than in women, i. 275. 
Macaws, Mr. Buxton’s observations 
on, i. 76 ; screams of, ii. 61. 
McCann, J., on mental individuality, 
i. 63. 
McClelland, J., on the Indian cypri- 
nidae, ii. 17. 
Macculloch, Col., on an Indian vil- 
lage without any female children, 
ii. 364. 
Macculloch, Dr., on tertian ague in 
a dog, i. 13. 
Macgillivray, W., on the vocal 
organs of birds, i. 59 ; on the 
Egyptian goose, ii. 48 ; on the 
habits of woodpeckers, ii. 63 ; on 
the habits of the snipe, ii. 64 ; on 
the whitethroat, ii. 69 ; on the 
moulting of the snipes, ii. 82 ; on 
the moulting of the anatidsG, ii. 85 ; 
on the finding of new mates by 
magpies, ii. 103 ; on the pairing of 
a blackbird and thrush, ii. 113; 
on pied ravens, ii. 126 ; on the 
guillemots, ii. 127 ; on the colours 
of the tits, ii. 174; on the im- 
mature plumage of birds, ii. 186 
et seqq. 
Machetes^ sexes and young of, ii. 216. 
Machetes pugnax, numerical propor- 
tion of the sexes in, i. 306 ; sup- 
posed to be polygamous, i. 270; 
pugnacity of the male, ii. 41 ; double 
moult in, ii. 81. 
Mackintosh, on the moral sense, i. 
70. 
MacLachlan, R., on Apatania mu- 
liehris and Boreus hyemalis, i. 314 ; 
on the anal appendages of male 
insects, i. 342 ; on the pairing of 
dragon-flies, i. 347 ; on dragon- 
flies, i. 362, 363 ; on dimorphism 
in Agrion, i. 363 ; on the want of 
pugnacity in male dragon-flies, i. 
364 ; on the ghost-moth in the 
Shetland Islands, i. 402. 
McLennan, Mr., on the origin of the 
belief in spiritual agencies, i. 66 ; 
on the prevalence of licentiousness- 
among savages, i. 96, ii. 358 ; on 
infanticide, i. 134, ii. 363 ; on the 
primitive barbarism of civilised na- 
tions, i. 181 ; on traces of the cus- 
tom of the forcible capture of wives, 
i. 182, ii. 365; on polyandry, ii. 
365. 
McNeill, Mr., on the use of the ant- 
lers of deer, ii. 252 ; on the Scotch 
deerhound, ii. 261 ; on the long^ 
