Sleep, summer and winter, of animals, i. 18, 185; ii. 48.
Snow, limit of perpetual; inequality of this limit on the northern and southern declivities of the Himalaya, i. 98.
Sorata and Illimani; their heights above the sea recently corrected, i. 57, 96, 277.
Steppes and Deserts, Characteristics of the European, i. 2;
African, i. 3;
Asiatic, i. 4;
South American, i. 7;
analogies and contrasts between the steppes and the ocean, i. 2, 35.
Strato, his sluice theory, ii. 78.
Sugar-cane; of Tahiti, of the West Indies, and of Guiana, i. 31.
Tacarigua, Lake of, i. 1;
its scenery and vegetation, i. 27.
Temperature.—Contrast between the temperature of the east coast of America and the west coast of Europe in the same latitudes, i. 129;
general remarks on the temperature of the United States of America, i. 131.
Thian-schan, one of the four parallel mountain chains in Central Asia, i. 72, 82.
Thibet, occupying the valley between the great chains of the Kuen-lün and Himalaya, divided into Upper, Middle, and Little Thibet; its mean elevation and description, i. 81.
Tibbos, i. 67.
Timpanogos, Laguna de, i. 44;
is the Great Salt Lake of Frémont, 280.
Traditions of Samothrace, ii. 78.
Trees, age of, ii. 86;
trees of highest growth, ii. 165.
Trisetum subspicatum, an inhabitant both of the Arctic and Antarctic Circles, ii. 186.
Tuaricks, i. 67.
Urwald, or primeval forest, a name too lightly used, i. 261;
true character of a primeval forest, 262;
description of the nocturnal life of wild animals in the Urwald, 266.
Vegetation, its propagation and extension over newly formed lands, ii. 8;
the absence of trees erroneously supposed to characterise hot countries, 10;
extensive arid tracts in countries otherwise of luxuriant vegetation a
Page:Aspects of nature in different lands and different climates; with scientific elucidations (IA b29329668 0002).pdf/354
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