Til 



Of artificial earthquakes . 106 

 Uncommon accounts of large rivers, and even seas, 



communicating by subterraneous passages . '107 

 Pliny's account of Mount Cymbotus, a town, and a 



city, totally swallowed up . . 109 

 Pliny's relation of rifty-four cities, and a great num. 



ber of villages, swallowed by an earthquake in 



1693 . . .lift 



Father Kiicher's account of a dreadful earthquake 



at Calabria, in 1638 . . Ill 



15. Destruction of Port Royal, ia Jamaica . 113 

 Account of that dreadful earthquake in 1692, by an 



eye witness . . ib. 



The rector of Port Royal's account of it : 114' 



16. Destruction of Lima . . 116 

 17 Callao, the port of Lima * ib, 



18. A remarkable deliverance from snow at a village 



under the Alps . . ib-. 



19. Of Poole's-Hole, and Elden-Hole, in Derbyshire 2O 

 Of the Giant's Causeway, in Ireland . ib* 

 Subterraneous nre of charmless nature, in Persia 121 



20. Eaithquakes caused by electricity . 122 



21. Account of a burning- well . . 123 



22. Of another, at Brosely . ' ib,. 



23. A fire of the same kind at Pietta Mala, a village on 



the Appenines . .. . 125> 

 Another of the same kind, called Grotto del Cam', 

 near Naples, with experiments of an English gen- 



tleman . _ .. ib 



24. A burning vapour in Wales .- 327 

 25. Persons consumed by internal fire ,. ib. 



Sundry instances thereof abroad * 128 

 Two instances thereof in England . 129 13O 



26. Sparkles issuing from a person's clothes , ib. 



217. Of glass . . ib 

 a 3 



