An attractively illustrated popular account of volcanoes around the globe, originally published in 1866, and in this English translation in 1868.Originally published in French in 1866, this work, designed for a popular readership, appeared in English translation in 1868. Fr?d?ric Zurcher (181690) and Elie Margoll? (181684) describe volcanoes around the world, from Hecla to Erebus, including eyewitness accounts of eruptions, references to contemporary scholarship, and with many attractive wood-cuts.Originally published in French in 1866, this work, designed for a popular readership, appeared in English translation in 1868. Fr?d?ric Zurcher (181690) and Elie Margoll? (181684) describe volcanoes around the world, from Hecla to Erebus, including eyewitness accounts of eruptions, references to contemporary scholarship, and with many attractive wood-cuts.The original French edition of this book appeared in 1866 as part of Hachette's extensive, popularising Biblioth?que des Merveilles series, which included several science titles by Fr?d?ric Zurcher (181690) and Elie Margoll? (181684). Their books were illustrated with attractive wood-cuts, and remained in print until the 1880s; they were also translated into English. This volume was published in London in 1868, and is a good example of popular science publishing in Victorian Britain. The material is organised geographically, beginning in Europe with Vesuvius, Etna and Icelandic volcanoes including Hecla, all of which had recently seen major eruptions. The authors quote from eyewitness accounts, and refer to scholarly publications on volcanoes including Darwin (1844) and Scrope (1862), also reissued in the Cambridge Library Collection. Later chapters describe oceanic volcanoes, the Andes, the volcanic zone of New Zealand's North Island, and recently discovered volcanoes such as Mt Erebus in Antarctica.1. Vesuvius; 2. Etna; 3. Iceland; 4. Volcanoes of the Atlantic; 5. The Andes; 6. Volcanoes of the Pacific and Indian lƒÓ