98 
GENERAL INDEX. 
Craven, J. R. Dakyns on the geology of 
part of, 1873, 78 
-W. Gomersall on the round boulder 
hills of, 1873, 80 
-Yorkshire, R. H. Tidderaan on con¬ 
current faulting and deposit in Car¬ 
boniferous times in, 1889, 600 
CRAWFORD (Dr. J.), human footprints in 
recent volcanic mud in Nicaragua, 1890, 
812 ; on the geology of Nicaragua, ib. 
Crawfurd (John), Address to the Sec¬ 
tion of Geograph} 7 - and Ethnology on 
the connection between ethnology and 
physical geography, 1861, 177 ; on the 
antiquity of man from the evidence of 
languages, 191 
-on colour as a test of the races of 
man, 1862, 143 ; on language as a test 
of the races of man, 144 
-on the so-called Celtic languages 
in reference to the question of race, 
1863, 135 ; on the origin of the gipsies, 
ib. ; on the commixture of the races of 
man as affecting the progress of civili¬ 
sation in Eastern Asia and the Malay 
and Polynesian Islands, ib. ; on Sir 
Charles Lyell’s ‘ Antiquity of Man,’ 
136 
-on the sources of the supply of tin 
for the bronze tools and weapons of 
antiquity, 1864, 142 ; on the supposed 
infecundity of human hybrids or 
crosses, ib. ; on the early migration of 
man, 143 ; on the supposed Stone, 
Bronze, and Iron ages of society, ib. 
■ - on the Oriental Negro, 1865, 117 ; 
on the physical and mental charac¬ 
teristics of the African or Occidental 
negro, ib. ; on cannibalism in relation 
to ethnology, 118 
- on the migration of cultivated 
plants with reference to ethnology, 
1866, 107 ; on the invention and history 
of written languages, 108 
* -on Cfesar’s account of Britain and 
its inhabitants, 1866, 107 
-on the antiquity of man, 1867, 114 ; 
on the dissemination of the Arabian 
race and language, ib. 
* -on the history and migration of 
sacchariferous or sugar-yielding plants 
in reference to ethnology, 1867, 114 ; 
on the animal and vegetable food of the 
aborigines of Australia, ib. ; on the 
supposed plurality of the races of man, 
ib.; on the supposed aborigines of 
India as distinguished from its civi¬ 
lised inhabitants, ib. ; on the com¬ 
plexion, hair, and eyes as tests of the 
races of man, ib. 
*Crawshay (Mrs. R. M.) on domestic 
service for gentlewomen, 1875, 209 
Creak (Staff Comm.) on the bes means 
of comparing and reducing i..ugnetic 
observations , 1886, 64 , 67 ; 1887, 320 ; 
1888, 28 ; 1889, 49 ; 1890, 172 
Creak (Comm.), tlie advantages to the 
science of terrestrial magnetism , to be 
obtained from an expedition to tlie region 
within the Antarctic Circle, 1886, 98 
Credit as an asset of a state, Hyde Clarke 
on, 1879, 469 
Creed census, the importance of a : with 
notice of that taken in 1881 for the 
diocese of Liverpool, Rev. Canon A. 
Hume on, 1883, 622 
Cremona (Prof. L.) on the geometrical 
transformation of plane curves, 1864, 3 
-sur les systemes de spheres et les 
systemes de droites, 1876, 12 
Creosote, blast-furnace, A. H. Allen on 
the utilisation of, 1887, 640 
Cresol derivatives, Dr. Henry E. Arm¬ 
strong on, 1873, 63 
Cresols and their derivatives , report on 
isomeric, 18 74, 73 ; 1875, 112 
Cretaceous strata, Prof. H. Coquand on 
the parallelism of the, of England and 
the north of France, with those of the 
west, south-west, and south of France 
and the north of Africa, 1868, 61 
--rocks, J. W. Judd on the discovery 
of, in the islands of Mull and Inch 
Kenneth, 1872, 115 
-formations, J. Howell on super-, in 
the neighbourhood of Brighton, 1872, 
109 
-and Eocene series, the relative ages 
of the American and the English, J. S. 
Gardner on, 1884, 739 
-fish-fauna of Mount Lebanon, a 
comparison of the, with that of the 
English Chalk, bv A. S. Woodward, 
1888, 678 
-mammals of North America, Prof. 
O. C. Marsh on the, 1890, 853 
- Polyzoa , report on the, 1890, 378 
Crew (H.) on the period of rotation of 
the sun as determined by the spectro¬ 
scope, 1887, 583 
Cribellites carbonarius, from the Moun¬ 
tain-Limestone formation of Northum¬ 
berland, description of, by George Tate, 
1863, 88 
Crichton and Craig (Messrs.) on a sys¬ 
tem of audible signals for railways, 
1875, 245 
Crime, Henry Ashworth on capital punish¬ 
ments, and their influence on, 1861, 203 
-Edward Hill on the prosecution of, 
1862, 154 
- and criminals in England, T. W. 
Saunders on statistics of, 1864, 172 
- in Australia, W. Westgarth on, 
1864, 180 
* - in England and France, M. Guerry 
on, 1864, 167 
-J. Thackray Bunce on the statistics 
