Carpenter, W. B., on the Influence of the Suggestion on Muscular Move- ment, I. 147.
on the Rhizopod type of Animal Life, II. 497.
on the Relation of the Vital to the Physical Forces, III. 206. Carpmael, W., on the Manufacture of Candles, 1. 21.
Catalogue of Library, New, II. 446. Catalytic Action, II. 66.
Cattle of Britain, I. 259.
Cerebral System of Classification, III. 174.
Chameleon, Mineral, m. 89. Charcoal, a Sanitary Agent, I. 53. Chaucer's Life and Works, II. 248. Chemical Circulation in the Body, IV. 449.
Action of Solar Rays, III. 210; of Diffused Daylight, IV. 653.
Discoveries from the Great Exhi- bition, I. 131.
Affinity, 1. 416. Dynamics, 1. 90.
Forces connected with Polarization of Light, 1. 45.
Properties of Compounds, 1. 451. Chemistry, Military, 11. 283; Agricul- tural, 289; of Light, 223; see Sun. Chevreul, M., Laws of Colours, II. 428. Chinese Lists of Meteors, II. 143.
Library presented, m. 219. Chlorate of Potash as a substitute for Gunpowder, IV. 617.
Chorley, H. F., on English Poetry with reference to Music, I. 317.
Chromatic Phænomena, II. 338.
Chronometry of Life, m. 117.
Clark's Process of Purifying Water, II. 467.
Clark, Latimer, on Electrical Quantity and Intensity, ш. 337.
Classification of the Elements by the Atomicities, Iv. 275.
Cleavage of Rocks, &c. II. 298. Coal, Formation of, 1. 284; m. 510. English, II. 59, 511; American, 181; Power of, 184.
Coal-gas, Manufacture of, &c. I. 320. Coal-tar Colours, History of, III. 468; Specimens of, 483.
Cobbold, T., on Natural History Sciences (no abstract), I. 243.
Coles's Shield-vessel, III. 509. Colloids, I. 424.
Colne River Water, II. 49.
Colour of Bodies in relation to their
state of Aggregation, IV. 489. Colours, Laws of, II. 428; the Three Primary, II. 370.
Combustion in Rarefied Air, m. 331. Compass Deviations in Iron Ships, IV. 518.
Conolly, Dr. J., on the Condition of the
Insane (no abstract), I. 303; on the Characters of Insanity, 375. Conservation of Force, II. 352; and Organic Nature, III. 347.
Cookery, Military, &c. n. 422. Cottager's Stove, II. 423. Cotton, Plea for, m. 514.
Coulvier-Gravier on Meteors, III. 145. Cowper, E., on Lighthouses, 1. 24; on Locks, 163 (no abstract).
Coxwell, Mr., Balloon Ascents, iv. 71. Crimean Mud Volcanoes, IV. 628. Crookes, W., on the Discovery of Thal- lium, Iv. 62.
Crystal Molecule, m. 95. Crystallographic Models, III. 86, 88. Crystalloids, II. 424.
Cuneiform Characters, early Use of, 1. 84. Discovery, III. 536; IV. 335.
on Modern Gothic Architecture, III. 32.
Development of Animals, II. 315. Deville, M., Experiments on Aluminium, II. 215; elected Hon. M.R.I. 413. Devonshire Caverns and Fossil Mam- malia, I. 149, 150. Dialysis, Graham's, I. 422. Dia-magnetism, II. 159.
Diamonds, Nature of, I. 229.
Dickinson, J., on Supply of Water for London, n. 47.
Dietaries, Table of, 1. 316. Diffusion, Chemical, III. 423. D'Orsey, A. J., on the Study of the English Language, I. 307. Dodd, G., Legacy from, IV. 346. Dollond's Improvement of the Tele- scope, IV. 642.
Donation Fund for the Promotion of Experimental Researches established, IV. 151; Contributions to, 153, 156, 177, 231, 243, 290, 316, 323, 325, 328, 347, 372, 435, 464, 483, 516, 549, 572, 660.
Donations for Promoting Scientific Re-
search, IV. 108, 109.
Doncaster new Churches, III. 40. Donders' Experiments on the Human Eye, iv. 572.
Donne, W. B., on Chaucer, п. 248. Donny, on Boiling Water, IV. 158. Dreaming, IV. 207.
Dresser, C., on Science and Ornamental Art, II. 350.
Druitt, R., on Houses in relation to Health, I. 133.
Du Bois-Reymond, E., on the Time required for the Transmission of Volition and Sensation through the Nerves, IV. 575.
Du Chaillu, F., Narrative of his Travels in Western Central Africa (no ab- stract), III. 335.
Dupré, Dr., Experiments on Chemical Circulation in the Body, IV. 564. Durham, A., on Sleeping and Dream- ing (no abstract), III. 430.
EARTH, its Magnetism, 1. 57; Measure- ment, &c. II. 17, 519; Temperature, &c. m. 139.
Earthquakes in South Italy, 11. 528.
Ebelmen's Mode of producing Artificial Rubies, &c. I. 83.
Eclipse of Thales, 1. 243; of Agathocles, 248; of 1851, &c. 62.
Eclipse, on Photographs of, by W. De la Rue, m. 362.
Eclipses, Phenomena of, 1. 65; Com- putation of, 243.
Edinburgh, Duke of, elected Honorary Member, IV. 694.
Education in Science, II. 556; in Art, IV. 380.
Electric Currents in Plants, 1. 75.
Induction, I. 345.
Force, I. 217.
Telegraph Wire, Experiments on, I. 346; Piece of, exhibited, 442. Telegraph, 11. 394, 557.
Quantity and Intensity, m. 337. Discharge, Action of Magnetic Force on it, I. 169.
Light employed in Lighthouses, III. 221.
Silk-loom, III. 271. Electricity, Transmission of, by Flame and Gases, I. 359; Velocity of, in dif- ferent kinds of Wire, 352; Heating Effects of, 119.
Military Applications of, ш. 249. Atmospheric, III. 277.
Electro-biology, L. 147.
Electro-magnetic Clocks, 1. 109.
Encke's Calculations on Pons' Comet, IV. 562.
English Language, Study of, I. 307. Poetry with reference to Music, III. 317.
Entasis, Tables of, 1. 128.
Eozoön, Discovery of, iv. 374. Ethnology, Methods and Results of, iv. 461.
Ethyl, Production of, 1. 326. Etna, Structure of, III. 129.
Evans, J., on the Forgery of Antiquities, IV. 356. Exhibition of 1851, Remarks on, 1. 151. of 1862, Discourse on, III. 485. Explosions, Causes of, &c. III. 438.
FAIRBAIRN, W., on Iron and its Resist- ance to Projectiles, III. 491. Faraday, M., on the Magnetic Relations of Oxygen and Nitrogen, I. 1.
on Atmospheric Magnetism, 1. 56. on Electric Currents in Plants, 1.
on Artificial Production of the Ruby, &c. by M. Ebelmen, I. 83. on Schönbein's Ozone, I. 94.
Faraday, M., on the Lines of Magnetic Force, 1. 105, 216, 229.
on the Researches of Boussingault and others on Oxygen, 1. 337
on Electric Induction-Associated cases of current and stated effects, I. 345.
on Vibrations and Tones of Heated bodies, 1. 356, 358.
on Magnetic Hypotheses, 1. 457. on Magnetic Philosophy, II. 6,
on Gravity, II. 10.
on Electric Conduction, п. 123. on Ruhmkorff's Induction Appa- ratus, n. 139.
on Petitjean's Silvering Process, 11. 308.
on Divided Gold, n. 310; IV. 659. on the Conservation of Force, I. 352.
on the Relations of Gold to Light, II. 444.
on Static Induction, II. 470, 490. - on Wheatstone's Electric Tele- graph, &c. and Scientific Education, 11. 556.
on Schönbein's Ozone and Anto- zone, III. 70.
on Phosphorescence, Fluorescence, &c. II. 159.
on Lighthouse Illumination-the Electric Light, II. 220.
on Electric Silk-Loom, III. 271. on Platinum, m. 321.
on De la Rue's Photographic
Eclipse Results, II. 362.
a Bust of him presented, Iv. 14. Faulhorn, Physiology of its Ascent, IV. 572. Fawcett, H., on Wealth and those who produce it (no abstract), IV. 434. Fergusson, J., on the Holy Sepulchre and the Temple at Jerusalem, III. 426; IV. 366.
Fick, Dr., on Source of Muscular Power, Iv. 654 et seq.
Field, F., on the Minerals of the Andes, III. 190.
on Magenta and its Derivative Colours, IV. 437. Fireballs, IV. 88.
Fish-culture, IV. 75.
Fitz-Roy, R., on Meteorological Tele- graphy, III. 444.
Fixed Stars, their Constitution, Iv. 441.
Fizeau, M., Photographic Engraving, II. 346.
Flint Implements of Abbeville, &c. IV. 213.
Fluorescence, ш. 160.
Fogs, IV. 50; Fog-signals, 52. Food, Preservation of, II. 72. Food of Man, under different conditions, I. 313; in relation to his Work, iv. 431, 681-3.
Forbes, E., on the Natural History of the British Seas, I. 17.
on the supposed Analogy between the Life of an Individual and the Duration of a Species, 1. 193.
on some new Points in British Geology, 1. 316.
on the Manifestation of Polarity in the Distribution of Beings in Time, I. 428.
Forbes, J. D., his Laws on Vibrations and Tones of Heated Bodies, I. 356. on his Theory of Glaciers, 11. 320, 545. Force, Conservation of, II. 352; ш. 347. Tyndall on, III. 527.
Magnetic, III. 98, 169.
Forgery of Antiquities, rv. 356. Fossils in Nova Scotia Coal-fields, I. 281. Foucault's Pendulum Experiment, 1. 70. Frankland, E., on the Employment of Chemical Light for Artificial Illumin- ation, I. 319.
on the Chemical Properties of Com- pounds and the Electrical Character of their Constituents, I. 451.
on the Production of Organic Bodies, II. 538.
on Combustion in Rarefied Air, III. 331.
on Artificial Illumination, IV. 16. elected Professor of Chemistry, IV.
Froude, J. A., on the Science of His- tory, IV. 180.
Fullerian Professors of Physiology:
T. Wharton Jones elected, 1. 101. T. H. Huxley elected, n. 147. R. Owen elected, I. 561. John Marshall elected, m. 526. T. H. Huxley elected, IV. 468.
GAINE, W., Parchment Paper, n. 409, 411.
Gale's Method of rendering Gunpowder non-explosive, Iv. 618.
Gas-fuel, m. 537. Gas-furnaces, III. 536.
Gases, Transmission of Heat through, III. 155, 295, 404; rv. 147.
Comparison of various Luminous,
Gaslight Improvements, Iv. 17. Gassiot, J. P., Experiments on Vacua,
III. 7; Experiments with his Vacuum- tubes, &c. 172.
Gautier on the Solar Spots, I. 238. Geisers of Iceland, I. 332. Gemmation, on, II. 534.
Geological Time, on, 1. 287, 428; ш. 109.
Geology of the Alps, 1. 31; Lake Su- perior, 154; London, 164; Ingle- borough, 278; Nova Scotia, 281; Isle of Wight, &c. 316.
Gerhardt's Discovery of Anhydrous Or- ganic Acids, I. 239.
German Gunpowder, Iv. 617.
Gillett, W. S., Improvements in Micro- scopes, I. 403-405. Glacial Epoch, Iv. 166.
Glaciers, II. 320, 545; m. 72, 269. Gladstone, J. H., on Chemical Affinity. I. 416.
on Gunpowder, II. 99.
on Chromatic Phenomena exhibited by Transmitted Light, 11. 336.
on Shooting Stars and Meteors, III. 143.
on Fogs and Fog-signals, rv. 49. Glaisher, J., on Aërial Scientific Re- search, IV. 65, 385. Glass Furnaces, III. 538. Glen-Roy, Parallel Roads of, III. 341. Gold, Extraction of, from its Ores, I.
205; Large Nugget from California, 3. Gold and Light, Relations of, II. 310, 444.
Gorilla, I. 10.
Gothic Architecture, II. 32.
Graham, T., on Dialysis, m. 422.
Grailich's Researches in Crystallo- graphy, ш. 98.
Grant, J., Cooking Apparatus, ш. 251. on Military Cookery, II. 422. Grape-fungus, Oïdium Tuckeri, 1. 305. Gratiolet's Researches on the Brain, III. 408.
Greek Coins as illustrating Greek Art, IV. 306.
Grove, W. R., on the Heating Effects of Electricity and Magnetism, 1. 119. on the Transmission of Electricity by Flame and Gases, I. 359.
on Perpetual Motion, n. 152. on Molecular Impressions of Light and Electricity, II. 458.
on the Electrical Discharge and its Stratified Appearance in Rarefied Media, III. 5.
on Boiling Water, Iv. 158. Gull, W. W., on Voluntary Movement, 1. 37, Gun-cotton, its Chemical History, &c. IV. 245; and Mechanical Nature, 292; improved, 622.
Gunpowder and its Substitutes, II. 99; IV. 616.
HALICARNASSUS, Discoveries at, III. 385. Hall, Sir B., Present from, II. 315. Haller on the Nervous Agent, IV. 577. Hamilton, W. R. presents Lepsius' Egypt, п. 414.
Harton Colliery Experiments, ш. 17. Health and Houses, III. 133. Haughton, S., Shot Drill Physiological Experiments, IV. 678.
Heat, Conduction of, 1, 254.
in relation to Crystallography, III. 99; its Transmission through Gases, 155, 295.
of the Sun, Theory respecting, III. 531.
Application of, to Cookery, п. 422. and Light, Analogies of, 1. 172. Heating Effects of Electricity and Mag- netism, I. 119.
Heliograph, m. 363.
Helmholtz, H., on the Law of the Con- servation of Force applied to Organic Nature, III. 347; Iv. 675.
on Transmission by the Nerves, IV. 578.
his Myographion, iv. 582.
on Fluorescence in the Human Eye, Iv. 571.
Herschel, A. S., on Luminous Meteors, &c. IV. 87, 644.
History, Science of, Iv. 180. Hochstädter's Substitute for Gun- powder, Iv. 617.
Hofmann, A. W., on Ammonia, u. 274.
on Mauve and Magenta, III. 468. on the Combining Power of Atoms, IV. 401.
Holland, Sir H., Letter and Donations
from, m. 107, 382, 526; Iv. 177, 316, 464, 660; elected President, 434. Holmes's Magneto-Electric Light Ap- paratus, in. 222; Iv. 17. Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem, Site of, III. 426; IV. 366.
Hopkins, W., on the Earth's Internal Temperature, &c. m. 139.
on the Motion of Glaciers, m. 410. Horizontal Shell-Firing, I. 504. Horsley and Ehrhardt, Substitutes for Gunpowder, IV. 617.
Hosking, W., on Ventilation by the Parlour Fire, 1. 76.
Houses in relation to Health, I. 133. Huggins, W., on the Physical and Chemical Constitution of the Fixed Stars and Nebulæ, iv. 441. Huxley, T. H., on Animal Individuality, I. 184.
on the Identity of Structure of Plants and Animals, 1. 298.
on the Common Plan of Animal Forms, I. 444.
on Development of Animal Life in Time, 1. 82.
on Natural History, II. 187.
on our Knowledge of Nerve, I. 432.
on Gemmation, П. 534.
on Persistent Types of Animal Life, m. 151.
on Species and Races, m. 195. on the Earliest Stages in the De- velopment of Animals, I. 315.
on Fossil Remains of Man, III. 420. on the Methods and Results of Ethnology, IV. 461.
elected Fullerian Professor of Phy- siology, II. 147; Iv. 468. Hydro-carbons, on, II. 63.
Hydrogen and its Homologues, 1. 325.
ICE, Physical Properties of, 11. 454, 545. Iceland, Eruptive Phenomena of, 1. 329. Iguanodon, Structure of, 1. 141,
VOL. IV. (No. 44.)
JACQUARD Loom, III. 271.
James, H., on Ordnance Survey, п. 516. on the Ordnance Survey of Jeru- salem, IV. 526. Japanese Art, IV. 99.
Jekyll, E., on Siege Operations, 11. 42. Jerusalem, Discoveries at, &c. IV. 23, 366, 526.
Jones, H. B., on the Acidity, Sweetness, and Strength of Wines, I. 381.
on Ventilation, II. 236.
elected Hon. Secretary, III. 293. on the Chemical Circulation in the Body, IV. 449
on the Existence in the Textures of Animals of a Fluorescent Substance closely resembling Quinine, Iv. 564. Jones, T. Wharton, obtains Actonian Prize, I. 54.
elected Fullerian Professor of Physiology, 1. 101.
Joule, J. S., Researches on Heat, 11. 202.
KARS, Siege of, II. 246.
Kent's Cavern, Torquay described, iv. 534.
Kew Observatory, its Work, Iv. 58. Kirchhoff's Spectrum Observations, III. 233, 395.
Knoblauch's Researches on Heat, 1. 178. . Koh-i-nur Diamond, its History, III. 231.
Kyhl, P., Nature-Printing, m. 110.
LABORATORY of Royal Institution, Assis- tants engaged, Iv. 156; recent re- searches in, see Faraday, Frankland, Tyndall.
Lacaita, J. P., on Dante, I. 118.
on Earthquakes in Southern Italy, II. 528. 3 E
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