Gynerium is a genus of grasses of the tribe Arundineae which includes Pampas Grass (Gynerium argenteum). A Brazilian species, Gynerium saccharoides produces sugar, though it is not the true sugar cane. Research Gynerium
Saccharum is a genus of tropical and subtropical plants belonging to the family Graminaceae. They have flat or narrow leaves and bear terminal panicles, some times bundle-flowered, sometimes densely spiked. Among the species is the sugar cane. Research Saccharum
John Williams was an american clergyman. He was born in 1644 and died in 1739. He became pastor at Deerfield, Massachusetts in 1686. He was carried away captive to Montreal by Indians with his family in 1704. He wrote 'The Redeemed Captive', a very popular account of his
experiences.
John Williams was an English missionary. He was born in 1791 at Tottenham, near London and died in 1839. In 1816 he was accepted by the London Missionary Society as a missionary to the Society Islands in the Pacific. Here Williams introduced a code of laws, encouraged the cultivation of the sugar cane and tobacco, and instructed the natives in printing and in house building. This missionary work was also extended to the Cook Islands, to Rarotonga (Harvey Island), to Samoa, and to the Friendly Islands. He was killed on the cannibal island of Enomanga (New Hebrides). He wrote 'Narrative of Missionary Enterprises in the South Sea Islands' in 1837.
John Williams is an American Oscar-winning composer and pianist. He was born in 1932. His best known for composing the music for the film 'Jaws' and also the 'Star Wars' films. Research John Williams
Glycolic acid is a colourless crystalline soluble hygroscopic compound found in sugar cane and sugar beet. It is used in tanning and in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, pesticides, adhesives, and plasticisers. Research Glycolic Acid
South America is a vast peninsula of a roughly triangular form, with its apex pointing southward. Its greatest length is 7680 km; its greatest breadth 5170 km.
South America is united to North America by the Isthmus of Panama. The coast- lines of South America, particularly the west, are comparatively little broken or interrupted by indentations, and in this respect resemble those of Africa. Towards the southern extremity is a group of islands, forming the archipelago of Tierra del Fuego. They are penetrated in every direction by bays and narrow inlets, ending often in glaciers.
The mountainous and elevated tracts of the continent are chiefly limited to the borders of the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans; the intervening space being occupied by a great series of plains, reaching from one extremity of the continent to the other, at an elevation generally less than 300 meters above the level of the sea. There are four chief mountain systems, the most remarkable of which is the Andes, that stretch along the whole of the west coast from south to north for a distance of 7200 km. They are of inconsiderable width comparatively, but attain great elevations, ranking in this respect next to the Himalayan Mountains; the highest known peak, Aconcagua, in Chile, being 6970 meters high. The second system is that of Parima, also called the Highlands of Guiana, in the north-east; culminating point, Maravaca, about 10,500 feet high. The third system is near the north coast, and is known under the general name of the Coast Chain of Venezuela; culminating point, the Silla de Caracas, with an elevation of 8600 feet. The fourth is that of Brazil in the south-east; culminating point, Itatiaia, 10,010 feet high.
There are altogether upwards of thirty active volcanoes in South America. They all belong to the Andes, and consist of three separate and distinct , series: the series of Chile, of Peru and Bolivia, and of Quito. The loftiest is Gualateiri in Peru, which reaches a height of 21,960 feet. The immense plains are one of the remarkable features of South America, sometimes stretching for hundreds of kilometres without exhibiting the slightest perceptible inequality. They are variously designated, being known as pampas in the south, as selvas in the Amazon region, and as Ilanos in the north. All the South American rivers of any magnitude carry their waters to the Atlantic.
The principal rivers are the Amazon, the Orinoco, and the Plata, the first being the greatest as regards volume of water among the rivers of the world. One of the most singular features in the hydrography of South America is the water connection existing between the Orinoco and the Amazon through the natural channel of the river Cassiquari. The lakes of any considerable size are few; the largest, LakeTiticaca, in the Andes. There are considerable diversities of climate in the different parts of the continent, but only in comparatively few are the extremes of heat and cold very great, and on the whole South America is neither very hot nor unhealthy, though so much of it is within the tropics. Over a great part of it the rains are adequate, and in many parts abundant; but on the west coast there are small regions where rain seldom or never tells.
The most distinguishing feature of the vegetation of South America is its prodigious forests, which cover about two- thirds of the whole continent, and yield valuable timber, ornamental woods and dyewoods, cinchona, India-rubber, vegetableivory, etc. In the tropical regions vegetation is on the grandest scale, grandeur also being combined with great beauty. Fruits abound, including oranges, limes, pineapples, mangoes, bananas, pomegranates, and many others. Southward of the line coffee, sugar cane, maize, and cacao are notable products. The chief vegetable products exported are coffee, rubber, cotton, wheat, cacao, maize, and sugar. Among plants especially belonging to South America are cacao, cinchonlt, coca, and Paraguaytea. Research South America
 
The Probert Encyclopaedia was designed, edited and programed by
Matt and Leela Probert