GENERAL INDEX. 
260 
Markham (Clements R.) on the physical 
geography of the portion of Abyssinia 
traversed by the English expeditionary 
force, 1868, 138 
-on the Eastern Cordillera, and the 
navigation of the river Madeira, 1871, 
184 ; on the geographical position of 
the tribes which formed the empire of 
the Yncas, 185 
- on the preparation of brief forms of 
instructions for travellers , ethnologists , 
4'c., 1873, 482 ; 1874, 214 
* - on recent Arctic explorations, 
1873, 172 
* -report on the progress of the Arctic 
expedition, and on the proceedings of 
H.M.S. ‘Valorous,’ 1875, 193 
-Address to the Geographical Section, 
1879, 420 ; on Indian marine surveys, 
453 
-on the progress of Arctic research 
since the foundation of the British 
Association, 1881, 743 
—— on the desirability of further re¬ 
search in the Antarctic regions , 1886, 
2 77 
-(Capt.) on a visit to the Galapagos 
Islands in H.M.S. ‘Triumph,’ 1880, 665 
Marley (John) on the discovery of rock- 
salt in the New Red Sandstone at Mid- 
dlesborough, 1863, 82 
j-and Prof. G. A. Lebour, sketch of 
the rise and progress of the Cleveland 
and South Durham salt industry, and 
on the extension of the Durham coal¬ 
field, 1889, 580 
* -(J.), N. Wood, J. Taylor, and 
J. W. Pease on coal, coke, and coal¬ 
mining in Northumberland and Dur¬ 
ham, 1863, 191 
Marmalade trade, C. C. Maxwell on the, 
of Dundee, 1867, 143 
Marocco, J. Stirling on a visit to the holy 
city of Fas, in, 1869, 168 
* -J. Stirling on the races of, 1869, 151 
Marr (J. E.) on some sections in the 
Lower Palasozoic rocks of the Craven 
district, 1881, 650 
-- on the Lower Palaeozoic rocks near 
Settle, 1886, 663 
-some effects of pressure on the sedi¬ 
mentary rocks of North Devon, 1887, 
706 
--- dynamic metamorpliism of Skiddaw 
slates, 1889, 568 
- on the best methods for the registra¬ 
tion of all type specimens of fossils in 
the British Bdes, 1890, 339 
Marriage, the probability that a, entered 
into at any age, will be fruitful, and 
that a marriage which has been child¬ 
less for several years will subsequently 
become fruitful, T. B. Sprague on, 1884, 
866 
Marriage customs of the New Britain 
group, Rev. B. Danks on, 1888, 847 
-and descent, the laws of, Dr. E. B. 
Tylor on a method of investigating, 
1888, 840 
—— laws of the United Kingdom, the 
required amendment in the, the Rev. 
Dr. Ace on, 1880, 672 
-laws of the North American tribes. 
Major J. W. Powell on the, 1884, 911 
-J. J. Murphy on M‘Lennan’s theory 
of primitive, 1874, 156 
Marriott (W.) on the separation of am¬ 
monia from coal-gas, 1861, 86 
* - on the estimation of sulphur in 
coal-gas, 1870, 60 
-on a method of obtaining ammonia. 
from shoddy and allied substances, 
1882, 500 
Mars, Rev. R. Main on the dimensions 
and ellipticity of, 1862, 15 
-Prof. Hennessy on the possible con¬ 
nection between the ellipticity of, and 
the general appearance of its surface, 
1864, 5 
*Marsh gas, Prof. Dewar on liquid, 1883, 
464 
Marsh (Capt. H. C.) on a journey over¬ 
land to India in 1872, via Meshed, 
Herat, Candahar, and the Boulan Pass, 
1877, 148 
- (J. E.) *011 closed-chain formula;, 
1888, 631 ; ton Van’t Hoff’s hypothesis 
and the constitution of benzene, ib. 
- and Prof. W. Odling- on some 
xenoene or diphenyl products and re¬ 
actions, 1887, 646 
* -and R. Stockdale, the production 
of camphor from turpentine, 1890, 785 
--— (Prof. O. C.), Jurassic birds and their 
allies, 1881, 661 
- on American Jurassic mammals, 
1884, 734 ; on the classification and 
affinities of Dinosaurian reptiles, 763 
- ^discovery of anurous amphibia. 
in the Jurassic deposits of America, 
1885, 1033 ; on the size of the brain in 
extinct animals, 1065 
-^comparison of the principal forms 
of Dinosauria of Europe and America, 
1888, 660 ; restoration of Brontops 
robustus , from the Miocene of America, 
706 
- on the gigantic Ceratopsidas (or 
horned dinosaurs) of North America, 
1890, 793 ; on the Cretaceous mammals 
of North America, 853 
Marshall (Prof. A. Millies) on the poly¬ 
morphism of Alcyonaria , 1883, 529 * 
on two new dredging machines, 540 
-on the mutual relation of the recent 
groups of echinoderms, 1884, 768 
- on the occupation of a table at the 
zoological station at Naples, 1884, 2 ,, 2 , 
