Solinus on mud volcanoes, 225.
Sommering on the fossil remains of the large vertebrata, 274.
Somerville, Mrs., on the volume of fire-balls and shooting stars, 116; faintness of light of planetary nebulae, 141.
Southern celestial hemisphere, its picturesque beauty, 85, 86.
Spontaneous generation, 345, 346.
Springs, hot and cold, 219-225; intermittent, 219; causes of their temperature, 220-222; thermal, 222, 345; deepest Artesian wells the warmest, observed by Arago, 223; salses, 224-226; influence of earthquake shocks on hot springs, 210, 222-224.
Stars, general account of, 85-90; fixed 89, 90, 104; double and multiple, 89, 147; nebulous, 85, 86, 151, 152; their translatory motion, 147-150; parallaxes and distances, 147-149; computations of Bessel and Herschel on their diameter and volume, 148; immense number in the Milky Way, 150, 151; star dust, 85; star gaugings, 150; starless spaces, 150, 152; telescopic stars, 152; velocity of the propagation of light of, 153, 154; apparition of new stars, 153.
Storms, magnetic and volcanic. See Magnetism, Volcanoes.
Strabo, observed the cessation of shocks of erthquake on the eruption of lava, 215; on the mode in which islands are formed, 227; description of the Hill of Methone, 240; volcanic theory, 243; divined the existence of a continent in the northern hemisphere between Theria and Thine, 289; extolled the varied form of our small continent as favorable to the moral and intellectual development of its people, 291, 292.
Struve, Otho, on the proper motion of the solar system, 146; investigations on the propagation of light, 153; parallaxes and distances of fixed stars, 153; observations on Halley's comet, 105.