1919.1 
Index. 
413 
INDEX. 
Acclimatization of birds, notes on (Haeus- 
ler), 16. 
Adams, C. E., A nomogram for transit- 
instrument star factors, 319. 
Adams, C. E., Daylight-saving, 250. 
Adams, C. E., Determination of the posi¬ 
tion of the moon by photography, 319. 
Adams, C. E., Photographs of the solar 
corona, 317. 
Adams, C. E., Tables of mathematical 
functions, 300. 
Adams, C. E., The almucantar method of 
observations for the determination of 
time and latitude, 319. 
Adams, C. E., The harmonic analysis of 
tidal observations and the prediction 
of tides, 301. 
Address to Science Congress by His 
Excellency the Governor-General, 238. 
Address to Science Congress bv the Hon. 
G. W. Russell, 239. 
Afforestation in New . Zealand (W. H. 
Skinner), 339. 
Age of the earth, some estimates (Benson), 
65. 
Agricultural research in Australia, rev., 
155. 
Agriculture’s debt to science (Wilson), 280. 
Albatrosses, petrels, and diving petrels, a 
review of (Loomis), rev., 409. 
Almucantar method of observations for 
the determination of time and latitude 
(Adams), 319. 
Andersen, J. C., The natural laws of 
poetry, 320. 
Anderson, G. P., The location of long¬ 
distance electric transmission-lines, 95. 
Anthropology at the University of Otago, 
58. 
Aspinall, F. B., 60. 
Astronomical notes, 38, 109, 193. 
Atlas of the world’s agriculture, 60. 
Auckland Institute, 223. 
Balfour, H., 160. 
Bartrum, J. A., Coal prospects at Waiwera, 
Auckland, 399. 
Bather, F. A., 159. 
Benson, W. N., A review of recent re¬ 
searches on the Mesozoic floras of 
Australasia, 29. 
Benson, W. N., Mountain structure, 253. 
Benson, W. N., Some estimates of the 
age of the earth, 65. 
Benson, W. N., The tectonic conditions 
accompanying the intrusion of basic 
and ultra-basic igneous rocks, 288. 
Best, ifllsdon, A Maori fish-trap showing 
unusually fine workmanship, 35. 
Best, Elsdon, Note on a curious steatite 
figurine found at Mauku, Auckland, 77. 
Betts, Miss M. W., Notes on. the autecology 
of certain plants of the peridotite belt. 
Nelson, 274. 
Biographical notice : L. Cockayne, Ph.D., 
f:r,s., 231. 
Birks, L., 157, 160. 
Board of Science and Art, 153. 
Borradaile, L. A., 158. 
Brady, G. S-, 158. 
Caiman. W. T., 158. 
Cawthron Institute, 403. 
Change-of-volume factor, application to 
the correlation of coal-seams amd coal¬ 
bearing strata (Morgan), 390. 
Cheeseman, T. F., 160. 
Chilton, C., 159. 
Chilton, C., A plea for a greater simplicity 
in biological language, 268. 
Chilton, C., Boring Crustacea in New 
Zealand, 3. 
Chrome-iron ore, mica, and tungsten-ore 
in New Zealand (Morgan and Hender¬ 
son), 43. 
Coal industry of New Zealand (New 
Zealand Board of Trade), rev., 410. 
Coal prospects at Waiwera, Auckland 
(Bartrum), 399. 
Cockayne, A. IL, The control of succession 
in surface-sown grassland, 279. 
Cockayne, L., biographical notice, 231 ; 
presidential address, 241 ; rev., 407. 
Cockayne, L., On the seedling form of 
the coral-shrub (Helichrysum coralloides 
(Hook. f.) Benth. & Hook, f.), 274. 
Cockayne, L. and A. H., Yellow flax 
disease of Phormium tenax, 256. 
Combined magnitude of double or multiple 
stars, 38. 
Control of animal-disease in New Zealand 
(Reakes), 258. 
Convergent evolution in the Crustacea 
(Chilton), 278. 
Coral-shrub ( Helichrysum^ coralloides (Hook, 
f.) Benth. & Hook, f.) (L. Cockayne), 274. 
Correspondence, 64, 160, 412. 
Cotton, C. A., 59, 159. 
Cotton, C. A., Mountain sculpture, 253. 
Cotton, C. A., Problems presented by the 
Notocene beds of Central Otago, 69. 
Cotton, C. A., Rough Ridge, Otago, and 
its splintered fault-scarp, 282. 
Crustacea, destructive boring, in New 
Zealand (Chilton), 3. 
Davis, W. M., The significant features of 
reef-bordered coasts, 282. 
Daylight-saving (Adams), 250. 
Dendy, A., 158. 
Departmental reports, 41, 112, 198, 386. 
Descriptions of New Zealand Lepidoptera 
(Meyrick), 274. 
