1921.] 
Index. 
309 
INDEX. 
Absorption spectrum of novae (Gifford), 
115. 
Adams, C. E., Observations of southern 
variable stars, 216. 
Adams, C. E., and Marsden, E., The 
Samoan Observatory, 157. 
Andersen, J. C., Maori string games, 81, 
139, 197. 
Andrew, R. L., 126. 
Arapuni dam site : Engineering survey 
(Sealy), 72. 
Archey, G., Record of a fish new to New 
Zealand, 223. 
Astronomical notes, 115, 119, 216. 
Aubel, V. W., 127. 
Auckland Institute, 59. 
Australasian Association meeting at Ho¬ 
bart, 228. 
Australian coot in New Zealand (Philpott), 
55. 
Avian haematozoa observed in New Zea¬ 
land (Do re), 10. 
Avoca, or Whatarama, district: Mount 
Torlesse Collieries, &c. (Morgan), 172. 
Bacteriology in relation to commercial 
meat products (Wright), 209. 
Best, E.— 
A toki titaha, or stone axe, from Tara¬ 
naki, 168. 
Huru, or ngahuru : Notes on a wide¬ 
spread word denoting ten, and its 
many variant forms in use throughout 
the Pacific and Indian Ocean regions, 
248. 
Stone-shanked Maori fish-hooks, 295. 
Two greenstone pendants, 169. 
Birks, L., and Ferguson, G. F., Notes on 
high-tension insulators, 177. 
Broken River coal area : Geological 
features (Speight), 93, 148. 
Burnett, A., Occultations of a star by the 
planet Jupiter in 1920, 119. 
Cable spans with suspension insulators 
(Robinson), 280. 
Calcium-carbonate content of some soils 
from Canterbury and Southland (Wild 
and Neal), 70. 
Calculating occultations of stars by the 
moon (Westland), 217. 
Caldwell, A. C., and Marsden, E., Inductive 
interference of power circuits with com¬ 
munication circuits, 286. 
Cawthron Institute, 65. 
Chilton, C., Notes on two northern cirri- 
pedes recorded from New Zealand, 53. 
Cockayne, L., Yellow - leaf disease in 
Phormium tenax, 190. 
Cominella quoyi Kiener (Hedley), 55. 
Correspondence, 308. 
Cotton, C. A., For how long will Welling¬ 
ton escape destruction by earthquake, 
229. 
Cushman, J. A., 125. 
Departmental reports, 172, 224, 297. 
Deposition of ice by a glacier spring 
(Hardcastle), 26. 
Design of laminated springs (Jenkinson), 
16. 
Discovery of a frog in New Zealand 
(Thomson), 220. 
Dominion Museum, 175. 
Dore, A. B.— 
Notes on some avian haematozoa 
observed in New Zealand, 10. 
The occurrence of malaria in the native 
ground-lark, 118. 
Editorial, 65. 
Elliot, M. A., Position and prospects of 
the frozen-meat trade, 67. 
Entomological news (Hudson), 56. 
Ethnographical explorations, 175. 
Farr, C. Coleridge, Relativity, 232. 
Fenton, Miss E. W. J., and Marsden, E., 
The relative efficiency of coal, gas, 
and electricity for domestic purposes, 
257. 
Ferguson, G. F., and Birks, L. J., Notes on 
high-tension insulators, 177. 
Fletcher, H. J., 63. 
Forestry, rate of growth of trees in relation 
to (Hutchins), 1. 
For how long will Wellington escape 
destruction by earthquake ? (Cotton), 
229. 
Fossil localities in Maitai rocks, two new 
(Speight), 105. 
Frogs in New Zealand (Smith), 308. 
Geological features disclosed by excava¬ 
tions at the proposed dam site at Ara¬ 
puni, Wakato River (Henderson), 224. 
Gifford, A. C.— 
The absorption spectum of the novae, 
115. 
The origin of new stars : the dynamics 
of celestial encounters, 33. 
Habit of the chiton Cryptoconchus porcsus 
(Burrow), note on (Mestayer), 117. 
Hardcastle, J., Deposition of ice by a 
glacier spring, 26. 
Hedley, C.— 
A revised name for a New Zealand 
trochoid, 54. 
On Siphonalia dilatata of Suter’s Manual, 
54. 
Henderson, J.— 
A mineral new to New Zealand— 
pilolite, 79. 
Geological features disclosed by excava¬ 
tions at the proposed dam site at 
Arapuni, Waikato River, 224. 
Heskett, J. A., Smelting the titaniferous 
ironsands of New Zealand, 111. 
Hog ben, G., The interpretation of a 
typical seismogram, 106. 
21—Science. 
