GENERAL INDEX. 
81 
Clarke (Hyde) on prehistoric names of 
weapons, 1873, 141 ; on the comparative 
chronology of the migrations of man 
in America in relation to comparative 
philology, ib. ; on the Ashantee and 
Fantee languages, 142 ; on the report 
■concerning Bushman researches of Dr. 
W. H. Bleek, Ph.D., ib. ; on the in¬ 
fluence of large centres of population 
on intellectual manifestation, 186 ; on 
the progress of the through railway to 
India, 213 
--on the river-names and populations 
of Hibernia, and their relation to the 
Old World and America, 1874, 146 ; on 
the Phoenician inscription of Brazil, ib .; 
on the Agaw race in Caucasia, Africa, 
and South America, ib. ; on Circassian 
and Etruscan, 147 ; on the classification 
of the Akka and Pygmy languages of 
Africa, ib. 
—-on prehistoric culture in India and 
Africa, 1875, 171 ; further note on pre¬ 
historic names of weapons, 172 ; on the 
Himalayan origin of the Magyar and 
Fin languages, ib. 
~—- on the prehistoric names for man, 
monkey, lizard, &c., 1876, 165 ; on 
Hittite, Khita, Hamath, Canaanite, 
Lydian, Etruscan, Peruvian, Mexican, 
&c., ib. ; on the part in the operation 
of capital due to fixed or limited 
amounts invested in trade, 198 
-on the debts and liabilities of sove¬ 
reign and quasi-sovereign states due to 
foreign creditors, 1877, 174 
--on the prehistoric relations of the 
Babylonian, Egyptian, and Chinese 
characters and culture, 1878, 590 
--on the Yarra and the languages of 
Australia in connection with those of 
the Mozambique and Portuguese Africa, 
1879, 381 ; on High Africa as the centre 
of a white race, 402 ; on credit as an 
asset of a state, 469 
-- on drum-signalling in Africa, 1880, 
620 ; on a manuscript, perhaps Khita, 
discovered by Capt. Gill in 'VYestern 
China, 621 ; recent doubts on mono- 
syllabism in philological classification, 
ib. ; on the pre-Cymric epoch in Wales, 
629 ; on the antiquity of gesture and 
sign language, and the origin of cha¬ 
racters and speech, 630 ; on the dis¬ 
covery of a bi-lingual seal in Cuneiform 
and Khita, 633 ; further researches on 
the prehistoric relations of the Baby¬ 
lonian, Chinese and Egyptian charac¬ 
ters, language and culture, and their 
connection with sign and gesture lan¬ 
guage, 635 ; on the ‘ Yei Syllabary ’ of 
Liberia, West Africa, ib. ; on the pro¬ 
gress of the English stations in the hill 
regions of India, 686 
Clarke (Hyde) on the numerical and 
philological relations of the Hebrew, 
Phoenician, or Canaanitic alphabet and 
the language of the Khita inscriptions, 
1881, 698 ; the early colonisation of 
Cyprus and Attica and its relation to 
Babylonia, ib. ; ‘^exhibition of stone 
implements from Asia Minor, 703 ; on 
the relation of the gold standard in 
England to the international money 
market, 759 
-- the names Britannia and Hiber¬ 
nia, with their Iberian relations, 1882, 
604 ; the Lolo character of Western 
China, 607 ; on the formula of Alfred 
R. Wallace in its relations to characters 
and alphabets, 60 S ; on some influences 
affecting the progress of our shipping 
and carrying trade, 640 
—— the Yahgan Indians of Tierra del 
Fuego, 1883, 572 ; the English-speaking 
populations of the world, 618 ; the 
growth of Barrow-in-Furness, &c., 623 ; 
a comparison of Morecambe Bay, 
Barrow-in-Furness, North Lancashire, 
West Cumberland, &c., in 1836 and 
1883, 631 
-prospective prices in Europe, 
America, and Asia, 1884, 868 ; observa¬ 
tions on the Mexican zodiac and astro¬ 
logy, 916 ; notes on researches as to 
American origins, 922 
-on depression of prices and results 
of economy of production, and on the 
prospect of recovery, 1885, 1168 ; the 
Piets and pne-Celtic Britain, 1223 
-the causes affecting the reduction 
in the cost of producing silver, 1886, 
767 ; remarks on the principles applic¬ 
able to colonial loans and finance, 776 
—— effective consumption and effective 
prices in their economical and statisti¬ 
cal relations, 1887, 832 
--the increase in Europe and America 
of nominal or fictitious capital, 1889, 
706 ; the right of property in trees on 
another’s land, as an origin of rights of 
property, 783 
-(Prof. J. W.) on the origin and anti¬ 
quity of the mounds of Arkansas, U.S., 
1877, 67 
-(T. C.) and C. Macdonald, Louis 
ville and New Albany bridge, 1886, 799 
-(Dr. W.) on a revision of national 
taxation, 1861, 216 
-(W. E.) on the migration of birds, 
1884, 266 ; 1885, 685 ; 1886, 264 ; 1887. 
70 
- on mailing a digest of the observa¬ 
tions on the migration of birds, 1889, 
114 ; 1890, 464 
Classification of animals, James Hinton 
on a physiological, 1862, 130 
- of plants, Dr. Maxwell T. Masters 
