GENERAL INDEX. 
97 
*Crace-Calvert (F.) on the oxidizing 
action of carbon, 1866, 34 
-on the amount of soluble and insol¬ 
uble phosphates in wheat-seed, 1869, 
66 
• -on the development of germ-life, 
1870, 132 
--on the estimation of sulphur in coal 
and coke, 1871,68; on the action of 
heat on germ-life, 122 ; on spontaneous 
generation, or protoplasmic life, 123 
-on the relative power of various sub¬ 
stances in preventing putrefaction and 
the development of protoplasmic and 
fungus life, 1872,69 
*Craft (W.) on a visit to Dahomey, 
1863, 135 
Crafts (Prof. J. M.) on the boiling points 
and vapour tension of mercury, of sul¬ 
phur, and of some compounds of carbon, 
determined by means of the hydrogen 
thermometer , 1882, 317 
-on the comparison of the mercury 
with the hydrogen thermometer, 1882, 
449 
-and A. Rilliet on the decompo¬ 
sition by heat of chlorate of potassium, 
1882, 493 
• -and Prof. C. Friedel on the decom¬ 
posing action that chloride of alu¬ 
minium exerts on hydrocarbons, 1883, 
468 
Crag formation, Charles Jecks on the, 
1869, 91 
-formations, Philip P. Carpenter on 
the connection between the, and the 
recent North Pacific faunas, 1864, 52 
-Red, George Maw on the sequence 
of the deposits in Norfolk and Suffolk 
superior to the, 1868, 73 
-at Aldebjq C. B. Rose on the, 1868, 77 
* - deposits of Norfolk and Suffolk, 
J. S. Taylor on the later, 1873, no 
-W. Whitaker on the occurrence of, 
in the S.W. part of Suffolk (Sudbury), 
1873, 92 
-of Bridlington, J. Gwyn Jeffreys on 
the so-called, 1874, 83 
-traces of man in the, H. Stopes on, 
1881, 700 
Crags, Upper and Lower, J. E. Taylor on 
the relation of the, in Norfolk, 1866, 
67 ; 1867, 157 
-E. Ray Lankesteron the oldest beds 
of the, 1868, 70 
* -J- E. Taylor on the Norwich, and 
their relation to the mammaliferous 
bed, 1868, 78 
-the Red and Coralline, C. Jecks on, 
1870, 75 
Craig and Crichton (Messrs.) on a sys¬ 
tem of audible signals for railways, 1875, 
245 
Craigie (Major P. G.) on the production 
and consumption of meat in the United 
Kingdom, 1884, 841 
Craigie (Major P. G.) on recent changes 
in Scottish agriculture, 1885, 1162 
*Cramer’s gemmae borne by Triclwmanes 
alata, Prof. F. 0. Bower on, 1887, 
761 
Crampton (T. R.), a system of excava¬ 
ting the Channel tunnel by hydraulic 
machinery, 1882, 664 
-on the construction and ventilation 
of long railway tunnels, 1883, 647 
- on balanced locomotive engines, 
1886, 819 
*Crane, A. B. Brown on a direct-acting 
combined steam and hydraulic, 1871, 
231 
—— a 20-ton travelling, W. Anderson on 
the application of electricity to the 
working of, 1888, 808 
Crania, Prof. T. H. Huxley on two extreme 
forms of human, 1866, 96 
*- Prof. G. Rollestun on sixteen 
Eskimo, 1868, 120 
- human, methods and results of 
measurements of the capacity of, Prof. 
W. H. Flower on, 1878, 581 " 
- four, from Kimberley, West Aus¬ 
tralia, observations on, by Dr. P. S. 
Abraham, 1886, 836 
-and other bones from Bowls’s barrow, 
Dr. J. G. Garson on, 1886, 841 
Cranial deformities, more especially on 
the scapho-cephalic skull, W. Turner 
on, 1863, 124 
-deformities, trigonocephalus, William 
Turner on, 1864, 129 
-characters of the inhabitants of 
Timor-laut, Dr. J. G. Garson on the, 
1883, 566 
*Craniology, F. Bridges on new views of, 
1870, 144 
Craniometry, Dr. John Cleland on a 
method of, 1861, 164 
Cranioscopy of South American nations, 
C. Carter Blake on some points in the, 
1863, 133 
Cranium, human, Henry Duckworth on a, 
from Amiens, 1863, 136 
-G. Busk on a very ancient human, 
from Gibraltar, 1864, 91 
-the connection of the hydroid arch 
with the, Prof. W. H. Flower on, 1870,. 
136 
- sec ‘ Skull ’; and ‘ Crania ’ 
Crannog in Wales, Rev. Edgar N. Dumble- 
ton on a, 1869, 130 
Crannogs, W. F. Wakeman on Irish, and 
their contents, 1874, 159 
*Cranston (G.) and J. Dewar on some 
reactions of chloro-sulphuric acid, 
1869, 69 
Craven, T. W. Barrow’s remarks on the 
bone-caves of, 1861, 108 
H 
