C las sifted Index . 
MISCELLANEA. 
4i5 
Archaeology. — Palaeolithic Man : A 
Commentary on Prof. R. A. S. 
Macalister’s work, ‘ A Text-Book 
of European Archaeology/ T. Shep- 
pard, 97-102 ; Hoard of Bronze 
Axes from Windsor, illustrated, T. 
Sheppard, 217-222 
Anthropology. — Anthropology at 
British Association Meeting at Hull, 
E. N. Fallaize, 347-350 
Birds. — Note on the Filming of the 
Cuckoo, 7-8 ; Otters Destructive 
to Birds, F. D. Welch, with footnote 
by R. Fortune, 76 ; Further Note 
thereon, W. G. Bramley, 206 ; 
' Migration of the Common Swal- 
low,’ Presidential Address of H. B. 
Booth, f.z.s., m.b.o.u., to Yorkshire 
Naturalists’ Union at Hull, De- 
cember, 1921, 55-60, 85-91 ; Note 
on Egg -Raiding at the Fame 
Islands, 81 ; Note on the East 
European Buzzard, 81 ; The 
Fothergill Family as Ornithologists, 
with portraits, H. S. Gladstone, 
149-152, 189-192 ; Swan Markings 
in the 14th and 15th Centuries, J. 
H. Guernsey, 198 ; Extending 
Range of the Fulmar Petrel, E. W. 
Wade, 223-224 ; Romance of the 
Cuckoo, E. P. Butterfield, 227-239 ; 
Pleistocene and Later Birds of Great 
Britain and Ireland, A. Bell, 251- 
253 ; Unrecorded Egg of the Great 
Auk, with illustration, T. Sheppard, 
254 ; Unusual Nesting Sites of 
Sand Martin at Huntingdon, R. 
Fortune, 299 ; Fulmar Petrel on 
Rathlin Island, J. A. S. Stendall, 
with footnote by R. Fortune, 
299-300 ; Californian Quail shot at 
Bridgnorth, F. Pitt, with footnote 
by R. Fortune, 300 
Botany. — Notes on the Pollination 
of Primulas, 52-53 ; Hippohae 
Rhamnoides L. and its Names, 
Arthur Bennett, 157-158 ; The 
Physiological Anatomy of the Vas- 
cular Plants Characteristic of Peat, 
having special reference to York- 
shire Peat Plants, illustrated, J. H. 
Priestley and M. Hinchliff, 263-268 ; 
Plant Distribution and Basic 
Ratios, W. H. Pearsall, 269-271 ; 
Botany at British Association Meet- 
ing at Hull, J. F. Robinson, 
253-356 ; Calcicole Plants on 
Boulder Clay, etc., in Ireland* 
R. J. Welch, 372 
Correspondence. — Snakestones, Miss 
W. H. Moberley, 30 ; Waxwings, 
S. H. Waterhouse, 30 ; Poisonous 
Effect of Hay, W. G. Bramley, 
143 ; Rook Superstition, C. Mosley, 
143 ; Otters and Birds, W. G. 
Bramley, 206 Early Records of 
Cuckoo, C. F. Procter and R. 
Fortune, 206 ; Cuckoo Doings, F. 
D. Welch, 332-333 ; Separation of 
the Sexes of the Chaffinch in 
Winter, E. P. Butterfield, with 
footnote by R. Fortune, 333 ; 
Clouded Yellow Butterfly and Hi- 
bernation, F. D. Welch, with foot- 
note by G. T. Porritt, 333-334 ; 
Destruction of Earwigs, F. D. 
Welch, 344 ; Mutilated Bees beneath 
Lime Trees, E. P. Butterfield, with 
footnote by G. T. Porritt, 399 ; 
Sap of Fir Trees attractive to Bees, 
R. J. Welch, with footnote by 
G. T. Porritt, 399-400 
Diptera. — Food of Boreus, C. L. 
Withy combe, 200 
Fungi. — Orchid Mycorrhiza, W. N. 
Cheesman, 181-182 ; Report on the 
Annual Fungus Foray of the British 
Mycological Society held at Kes- 
wick in September, A. E. Peck, 334 
Geology and Palaeontology. — Hoard 
of Bronze Axes from Windsor, 
illustrated, T. Sheppard, 217-222 ; 
Pleistocene and Later Birds of 
Great Britain and Ireland, A. Bell, 
251-253 ; Jurassic History, with 
special reference to Buckman’s Type 
Ammonites, 31 1 -312 ; Geology at 
British Association Meeting at Hull, 
A Charlesworth, 341-344 
Magazine Notes. — 31, 32, 68, 71, 
74, hi, 120, 124, 170, 175, 186, 
188, 197, 207-8, 232, 240, 290, 293, 
302, 308, 336, 340, 290, 293, 302, 
308, 336, 340, 346, 366,. 388, 395 
Mammalia. — Fawn and White Rat 
at Menai Bridge, Anglesey, H. E. 
Forrest, 18; Erythristic Badgers, 
H. E. Forrest, 19, 76 ; Otters 
Destructive to Birds, F. D. Welch, 
with footnote by R. Fortune, 76 ; 
Further Note thereon, W. G. 
Bramley, 206 
Museums. — Report on Annual Meet- 
ing of Museums Association at 
Leicester in July, 245-246 
1922 Dec. 1 
