INDEX. 



455 



Corcovado, Volcan de, 274. 



Cordilleras. See Andes. 



Corea, volcanoes of, 353. 



Cosima, small elevation of the volcano of, 



234. 

 Costa, Colonel A., his experiments on 



mean annual temperature, 43. 

 Cotopaxi, mineralogical composition of, 



322. 

 Craters of elevation, 215; distinguished 



from true volcanoes, 217. See, also, 



Volcanoes. 



Crozet's 



traces of former volcanic 



;et's group, 



action in, 362. 

 Crust of the earth, consideration 



varying thickness, 410. 

 Crystallized minerals of the Maars, 224; 



greater number found on Vesuvius, 224. 

 Cueva de Antisana, 312. 

 Cyclades, volcanic phenomena in the, 254. 



distinguished, but impTOperly, as PTu- 

 tonic and Volcanic, 174; three groups 

 of phenomena which indicate the exist- 

 ence of one general cause, 176; list of 

 memorable examples of these phenome- 

 na, 176. 



Earth-waves in volcanic phenomena, 165. 



Eastern Asia, volcanoes of the islands of, 

 344. 



Edgecombe, Mount, a volcano, 255, 391 ; 

 another in New Zealand, 372. 



Edinburgh, beautiful aurora observed at, 

 153. 



Dana, James, his valuable researches in 

 the Pacific, 364; his grouping of the ba- 

 saltic and coral islands, 365; and the vol- 

 canoes of the Sandwich Islands, 367. 



Darwin, Charles, his enlarged views on 



earthquakes and eruptions of volcanoes, 

 272 ; general acknowledgment of obliga- 

 tions of science to, 364. 



Dasar, sand lakes of, 449. 



Dechcn, II_yon, on volcanic 

 in the Efll, 226. 



Declination. See Magnetism. 



Degree, table of the increase in length of 

 the, from the equator to the pole, 21. 



Demavend, volcano of, 335>; question of 

 its altitude, 334. 



Density of the earth, experiments to de- 

 termine, 33; Airy's results, 35. 



Detritus dikes, 311. 



Deville, on the structure and color of the 

 mass in certain volcanoes, 432. 



Devonian slate, 221. 



Diablo, Monte del, in California, 383. 



Diamagnetism, its discovery by Faraday, 

 51, 77. 



Dio Cassius on the eruptions of Vesuvius, 

 399. 



Diodorus Siculus on the Phlegrsean Fields, 

 400. 



Disturbances, magnetic, table of, 180. 



Djebel el Tir, a volcano, 334. 



Dome-shaped and bell-shaped mountains, 

 peculiar aspect given by, to the land- 

 scape, 218. 



Domite, origin of the term, 421. 



Dry fog of the summer of 17S3, 393. 



Duperrey, his observations on the mag- 

 netic equator, 103. 



Earth, its size, configuration, and density, 

 14,35; interior heat, 37, 234 ; magnetic 



Edrisi on the land of Gog and Magog, 337. 

 n its Eifel, extinct volcanoes of the, 221 ; two 

 kinds of volcanic activity distinguish- 

 able, 222 ; Mitscherlich on the minerals, 

 224; Ehrenberg on the infusoria, 227. 



Elburuz, as an extinct volcano, 339. 



Elevation, question of the influence of, on 

 magnetic dip and intensity, 111 ; craters 

 of, distinguished from true volcanoes, 

 217. 



Elias, Mount, a volcano, 239, 391. 



Elliot, Captain, on the magnetic equator. 

 104. 



Ellipticity of the earth, speculations of tha 

 ancients on the, 29 ; Bezel's determina- 

 tion, 29. 



El Nuevo, a volcano, 260. 

 phenomena El Viejo, a volcano, measurements of, 260. 



El Volcancito, now a mountain of ashes, 

 302. 



Emanations from fumarole?, their nature, 

 896. 



Enceladus. See Typhon. 



England, volcanic phenomena in, S29, 450. 



Equator, magnetic. See Magnetic Equa- 

 tor. 



Erebus?, Mount, the volcano, 101, 237. 



Ei-man on the magnetic equator, 103 ; his 

 researches on the volcanoes of Kamt- 

 schatka, 340. 



Erupted blocks, 446. 



Eruption, masses of, considerations on, 

 215; craters of, 216. 



Eruptions of volcanoes, considerations on 

 the general laws of, 243; varying heights 

 to which matters are cast, 251. 



Eubcea, Strabo's description of an earth- 

 quake in, 215. 



Europe, active volcanoes of, 328; extinct 

 volcanoes and volcanic phenomena, 221, 

 227, 329, 450. 



Fairweather, Mount, a volcano, 391. 

 Faraday's discoveiy of the paramagnetic 



force of oxygen, 78; important results 



expected from it, 81, 98; on diarmagnet- 



ism, 51, 78. 

 Feldspar, variety of minerals comprised 



under the denomination of, 427, 442. 



activity, 50 ; magnetic storms, 137 ; po- Ferdinandea, the volcanic island, 328. 

 lar light, 146; reaction of the interior on [Figure of the earth, attempts to solve the 



the surface, 157 (see, also, Earthquakes, 

 Volcanoes); thickness of the crust of, 

 probably very unequal, 163. 

 Earthquakes, variety of views as to their 

 cause, 162; the impulse, 162; trans- 



problem, 18; determinations of Bessel, 

 19 ; earlier observations, 20. 

 Fissures caused by earthquake?, 166 ; vol- 

 canic, 216, 218 ; volcanoes upheaved on 

 fissures, 252. See Volcanoes. 



latory movements, 167; subterranean Fitzroy's magnetic observations, 71. 

 i, 172; (Floods in rivers, prognostication of, 



noises, 171 ; velocity of propagation, 



180. 



