§le]^orts 0f Hlwtings. 
GENERAL. 
D uring the year 1901, which was the thirty-eighth in 
the history of the society, the normal eight monthly 
meetings were held. At the annual meeting held on Janu- 
ary 24, however, in accordance with a motion brought for- 
ward by Professor Lloyd Morgan, the retiring president, the 
society adjourned after the purely business matter had been 
dealt with in order to mark their sense of the nation’s loss 
by the death of her late Majesty Queen Victoria. No 
exhibition meeting was held. The papers read at the 
general meetings were as follows : — 
Eeb. 7. Dr. A. C. Fryer, M.A., F.G.S., on Prehistoric 
Man.” 
Mar. 14. Mr. L. N. Tyack, on “ The Physics of Cloud 
Formation.” 
Apr. 4. Mr. G. C. Griffiths, F.Z.S., F.E.S., on Silk 
and the Silk Moths.” 
May 2. Mr. G. Brebner, on Plant Hairs and what they 
do.” 
Oct. 3. Mr. L. N. Tyack, on ‘‘ The Makers of Modern 
Astronomy.” 
Nov. 1. Dr. F. E* Francis, on The Atmosphere.” 
Dec. 5. Mr. G. Munro Smith, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., on 
The Growth and Decay of Tissues.” 
