TRUE VOLCANOES. 235 



If)jpsomctnj of Volcanoes. 



First group, from 700 to -4000 Paris or 710 to 42G4 English 



feet ill height. 



The volcano of the Japanese island Cosima, to the south of Jczo : 

 746 feet, according to Horner. 



The volcano of the Liparian island Volcano: 1305 English feet, ac- 

 cording to F. Hoffmann.* 



Ghmung Apt (signifying Fieri/ Mountain in the Malay language), the 

 volcano of the island of Banda: 1949 feet. 



The volcano of Izalco,f in 'the state of San Salvador (in Central 

 America), which -was first ascended in the year 1770, and which 

 is in a state of almost constant eruption: 2132 feet, according to 

 Squier. 



Guming Ringgit, the lowest volcano of Java : 2315 feet, according 

 to Junghuhn.J 



Stromboli: 2958 feet, according to F. Hoffmann. 



Vesuvius, the Rocca del Palo, on the highest northern margin of the 

 crater: the average of my two barometrical measurements§ of 

 1805 and 1822 gives 3997 feet. 



The volcano of Jorullo, which broke out in the elevated plateau of 

 Mexico)! on the 29th September, 1759 : 4266 feet. 



Second group, from 4000 to 8000 Paris or 4264 to 8528 En- 

 glish feet in height. 



Mont Pele, of Martinique : 4707 feet, according to Dupuget. 



The Sovfriere, of Guadaloupe : 4867 feet, according to C. Deville. 



Gunung Lamongan, in the most eastern part of Java : 5341 feet, ac- 

 cording to Junghuhn. 



* Letter from F. Hoffmann to Leopold von Buch, upon the Geog- 

 nostic Constitution of the Lipari Islands, in Poggend., Annalen, bd. 

 xxvi., 1832, s. 59. Volcano, 1268 feet, according to the recent meas- 

 urement of C. Sainte-Claire Deville, had violent eruptions of scoria? 

 and ashes in the year 1444, at the end of the 16th century, in 1731, 1739, 

 and 1771. Its fumaroles contain ammonia, borate of selenium, sul- 

 phuret of arsenic, phosphorus, and, according to Bornemann, traces 

 of iodine. The last three substances occur here for the first time 

 among volcanic products- (Conqites renclus de VAcad. des Sciences, 

 t. xliii., 1856, p. 683). 



t Squier, in the tenth annual meeting of the American Association, 

 New Haven, 1850. 



% See Franz Junghuhn's exceedingly instructive work, Java, seine 

 Gestalt unci Pflanzendecke, 1852, bd. i., s. 99. Kinggit has been near- 

 ly extinct since its fearful eruption in the year 1586, which cost the 

 lives of many thousand people. 



§ The summit of Vesuvius is, therefore, only 260 feet higher than 

 the Brocken. 



|| Humboldt, Vues des Cordilleres, pi. xliii., and Atlas Geogr. et 

 Physique, pi. 29. 



