386 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 58 



Reference 



Number 



Sulphides, see Association of tin with. 



Sulphur, Capitaine on action of tin, arsenic, antimony, and sulphur on 



the chloride of mercury 1465 



Headden on compounds of, in an old Cornwall tin furnace 1617 



Hennecke on.occurrence in Persia 864 



Sumatra: 



Benedict on tin in 281, 679, 1301 



Fawns on tin in 1320 



On tin in Siak 1320 



Fennema on tin in 293 



On tin in the Boven Banjoe field of Palembang 292 



Everwyn on tin in Simpang 287, 291 



On tin in Siak 290 



Hamilton on tin in 294 



Neeb on tin in 298 



Palembang, Boven Banjoe tin field 292 



Posewitz on tin in 301 



Rolker on tin in Siak 305 



Scrivenor on tin in Siak 726 



Siak, tin in 290, 305, 726. 1320 



Simpang, tin in 287, 291 



Source of tin used by ancients 1405 



See also East Indies. 



Sungei Batang Padang, see Malay Peninsula, Perak. 



Sungei Besi, see Malay Peninsula, Perak. 



Sungei Bidor, see Malay Peninsula, Perak. 



Sungei Kinta, see Malay Peninsula, Perak. 



Sungei Lembing, see Malay Peninsula, Kuantan. 



Sungei Riu, see Malay Peninsula, Jelebu. 



Sungei Ujong, see Malay Peninsula, Malacca. 



Suo, see Japan. 



Superior segunda mine, see Spain, Carthagene. 



Supply of tin (amount available for future mining): 



Banka, 1897 79 



Billiton, 1897 79 



Cape Colony, 1906 233 



Cornwall, 1873 364 



1897 368 



1906 441 



1907 329 



Devon, 1873 364 



Great Britain, 1884 415 



Kongo, 1906 273, 274 



Malay Peninsula, 1900 712 



1901 665 



