56 Gen. Sub. 
I. GENERAL SUBJECTS; 
system may be regarded as an immense vascular gland, having its origin 
in fViA wonrma orrotorn oonrafinrf in if a t*a niJlatieS a product, tll6 lymph, 
Essay on Mikrologie — minute histology ; Altmann (5). — Elements of 
histology ; Ram6n y Cajal (552). — Book on the Cell ; Hertwig (302). 
Nervous structures ; Donaldson (154). — New ideas on structure of 
nervous system ; Ram6n y Cajal (549). — Histology of nervous system; 
Lenhossek (387). — Minute structure of Nerve-Cells in Invertebrates : 
earthworm, crayfish, snail, cephalopod, &c., histology of nucleus, 
nucleolus, nuclear membrane ; Pflucke (524). — Structure of nerve- 
cells ; Dehler (143), Held (291). — Nervous medulla ; Ambronn & 
Held (6). — Criticism of the hypothesis (Rabl-Riickard, Duval) that 
the ends of the neurodendrites exhibit amoeboid movements ; von 
KOlliker(349). — Minute structure of nervous tissue: comparative study, 
general conclusion that the spongioplasm is a supporting framework, and 
the hyaloplasm alone nervous ; Rohde (582). 
Cerebellar ganglia ; Ram6n y Cajal (550). —Cortex of cerebrum in 
lower Vertebrates ; Neumayer (487). — Structure of paraphysis cerebri ; 
Studnicka (681). 
Histology and histogenesis of the spinal cord; Studnicka (683). — 
Anterior end of the spinal cord in Amniota\ Saint-Remy (614). — Minute 
anatomy of spinal cord ; Golgi (251). 
Nerve endings : Neuro-muscular or muscle spindles have nothing to do 
with motor plates, but are nerve-endings of a sensory nature, as is borne 
out by their development and minute structure ; Weiss & Dutil (740). 
—Muscle-fibre, electric disc, and motor plate ; Purvis (541). — Report of 
recent work on nerve-endings indigestive glands, skin-glands, lungs, kidneys, 
gonads, spleen, thyroid, supra-renals ; Kallius (334). — Innervation of 
gonads of birds, reptiles, and amphibians ; Weidenbaum (735). — Retina 
of Vertebrates ; Krause (362), Ram6n y Cajal (551), Weinland (73G). 
The crystalline lens ; Hurst (320). 
Structure of striped muscle (in Ostracoda ), a new theory ; Daday 
(131). — Minute structure of muscle-fibres in ants : confirmatory of Van 
Gehuchten’s results ; Janet (327). — Smooth muscles of Vertebrates, 
excepting fishes ; Schultz (642). — Smooth and striped muscle ; 
Marchesini & Ferrari (422). 
Blood-corpuscles of crayfish and freshwater mussel : Lymph glands of 
crayfish ; Owsjannikow (506). — Leucocytes, importance of these in the 
degeneration of the tadpole’s tail has been much exaggerated ; Noet- 
zel (493). — Varieties of leucocytes ; Sherrington (650). — Granular 
leucocytes; Gulland (265). — Eosinophilous cells; Gulland (205), 
Siawcillo (652). — Eosinophilous granulation of the blood of birds and 
mammals due to phagocytosis of paranuclein (round) and degenerated 
Myology as an aid in classification ; Parsons (512). 
Ranvier (553, 554). 
b. Histology. 
