- South American Plate (geology)
Andes Mountains: Geology: …two of these plates—the continental South American Plate and the oceanic Nazca Plate—gave rise to the orogenic (mountain-building) activity that produced the Andes.
- South American rattlesnake (snake)
rattlesnake: scutulatus), and the South American rattlesnake, or cascabel (C. durissus). Their venom attacks the nervous system more strongly than that of other rattlesnakes. The South American rattlesnake has the largest distribution of any rattlesnake; it ranges from Mexico to Argentina and is the only rattlesnake found throughout Central…
- South American region (faunal region)
Neotropical region, one of the six major biogeographic areas of the world defined on the basis of its characteristic animal life. It extends south from the Mexican desert into South America as far as the subantarctic zone. It includes such animals as the llama, tapir, deer, pig, jaguar, puma, a
- South American river dolphin (mammal family)
dolphin: Paleontology and classification: Family Iniidae (South American river dolphins) 5 species in 3 genera inhabiting rivers and coasts of eastern South America and China. The Chinese river dolphin, or baiji (Lipotes vexillifer), remains in this group, but most sources consider it to be extinct. Assorted References
- South American river turtle (turtle)
arrau, large and somewhat flat freshwater turtle with a neck that does not retract but instead can be tucked to the side and concealed beneath the shell (see side-necked turtle). Of the several South American Podocnemis species, arrau generally refers to the largest, P. expansa of northern South
- South American sea lion (mammal)
sea lion: The southern, or South American, sea lion (Otaria byronia) is generally brown with a yellowish orange belly. It swims in coastal waters from northern Peru southward to Tierra del Fuego and even around the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic. The male is about 2.5 metres…
- South and West (work by Didion)
Joan Didion: South and West (2017) contains two unpublished excerpts from her notebooks, with the main piece describing a road trip Didion took through the American South in 1970. Let Me Tell You What I Mean (2021) is a collection of previously released essays. Didion was honoured…
- South Andaman Island (island, Indian Ocean)
Andaman Islands: …North Andaman, Middle Andaman, and South Andaman—closely positioned and collectively known as Great Andaman. Also prominent is Little Andaman, to the south. Of the still-extant original inhabitants—including the Sentinalese, the Jarawa, the Onge, and a group of peoples collectively known as the Great Andamese—only the first three retain a traditional…
- South Arabian languages
South Arabian languages, two groups of Semitic languages in southern Arabia that were formerly thought to constitute a single language group. The languages spoken in modern times are known as the Modern South Arabian languages, while the languages attested in ancient times are known as Epigraphic
- South Asia (region, Asia)
South Asia, subregion of Asia, consisting of the Indo-Gangetic Plain and peninsular India. It includes the countries of Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Pakistan, Nepal, and Sri Lanka; Afghanistan and the Maldives are often considered part of South Asia as well. The term is often used synonymously with
- South Asian arts
South Asian arts, the literary, performing, and visual arts of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. Despite a history of ethnic, linguistic, and political fragmentation, the people of the Indian subcontinent are unified by a common cultural and ethical outlook; a wealth of ancient textual
- South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation (Asian organization)
South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation (SAARC), organization of South Asian nations, founded in 1985 and dedicated to economic, technological, social, and cultural development emphasizing collective self-reliance. Its seven founding members are Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives,
- South Asian low (meteorology)
Asia: The polar front: Known as the South Asian (or Iranian) low, it appears in April and is fully developed from June to August. The onset of monsoon in India and mainland Southeast Asia is related to changes in the circulation pattern that occur by June—specifically, the disintegration of the southern jet…
- South Asian music
microtonal music: South Asian music theory posits a scale of 22 unequal intervals to the octave; although, in practice, a chromatic scale of 100-cent intervals is used, ornaments use intervals of smaller size. In Indonesian music, intervals of many sizes appear, including those of the slendro scale,…
- South Asian people
dress: South Asia: The Hindu population of South Asia comprises about 2,000 castes, each of whose members wear distinct clothes and ornaments. Thus, the subject of dress cannot be dealt with satisfactorily in a few paragraphs. Some of the principal features of upper-class Hindu and
- South Atlantic Current (ocean current)
equatorial current: …de la Plata (as the South Atlantic Current) then pushes to the African coast, where it veers north as the Benguela Current. This joins the Guinea Current to re-form the Atlantic South Equatorial Current.
- South Atlantic Ocean (region, Atlantic Ocean)
Atlantic Ocean: The South Atlantic: Over the South Atlantic the belt of prevailing westerlies extends from about latitude 40° S southward into the Southern Ocean almost to Antarctica, and the South Atlantic high-pressure area is centred around 30° S. This anticyclone (circulation of winds around a central region…
- South Atlantic Quarterly (American periodical)
John Spencer Bassett: …historian and founder of the South Atlantic Quarterly, influential in the development of historiography in the American South.
- South Atlantic War (Argentina-United Kingdom [1982])
Falkland Islands War, a brief undeclared war fought between Argentina and Great Britain in 1982 over control of the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas) and associated island dependencies. Argentina had claimed sovereignty over the Falkland Islands, which lie 300 miles (480 km) east of its coast,
- South Australia (state, Australia)
South Australia, state of south-central Australia. It occupies one of the driest, most barren parts of the continent, but its southern fringe consists of well-watered and fertile lands and is where most of the population is located. It is bounded by Western Australia to the west, the Northern
- South Australia colony (British colony, Australia)
South Australia: European settlement: The proposals for the new colony emerged through a series of controversial negotiations with the British government. The government generally curbed, though it did not eradicate, the original plan’s aspirations toward civil and religious liberties. The projectors were wrongly suspected of republicanism. South Australia was to be no ordinary…
- South Australia, Art Gallery of (gallery, South Australia, Australia)
South Australia: The arts: The Art Gallery of South Australia in Adelaide houses collections of Australian, European, and Asian art, including one of the finest collections of Southeast Asian ceramics. The Adelaide Symphony Orchestra gives regular concerts, especially in the refurbished 19th-century Adelaide Town Hall. The Adelaide Festival Centre, opened…
- South Australia, flag of (Australian flag)
Australian flag consisting of a blue field (background) with the Union Jack in the canton and a magpie emblem at the fly end. The flag is sometimes referred to as a defaced Blue Ensign.In accordance with the Colonial Naval Defence Act of 1865, each British colony was required to fly the British
- South Australia, University of (university, South Australia, Australia)
Adelaide: …Flinders University (1966) and the University of South Australia (1991). The biennial Adelaide Festival of Arts (1960) was the first international celebration of its kind to be held in Australia. Pop. (2006) local government area, 16,659; urban agglom., 1,105,840.
- South Australian Act (United Kingdom [1834])
Edward Gibbon Wakefield: …of his theories, influenced the South Australian Act of 1834, which forbade the organization of South Australia as a convict settlement and incorporated the notion of the “sufficient price” for subsidizing immigration. The colony was founded Dec. 28, 1836.
- South Australian Film Corporation
South Australia: The arts: The South Australian Film Corporation (SAFC) produced many feature films for television and cinema before changing in 1994 from a production company to an agency that facilitates filming and promotes the industry within the state. The SAFC has been involved with numerous award-winning films, including The…
- South Ayrshire (council area, Scotland, United Kingdom)
South Ayrshire, council area, southwestern Scotland. It stretches along the shores of the Firth of Clyde and includes the steep rock of Ailsa Craig at its mouth. In the south it includes a section of the hilly Southern Uplands. South Ayrshire lies entirely within the historic county of Ayrshire.
- South Banda Basin (basin, Pacific Ocean)
Banda Sea: …(5,800 metres) deep, while the South Banda Basin is 17,700 feet (5,400 metres) deep. A volcanic ridge further divides the southern South Banda Basin from the Weber Basin, the deepest in the sea, at some 24,409 feet (7,440 metres). The active volcano, Mount Api, rises from the floor of the…
- South Bank (arts complex, London, United Kingdom)
South Bank, loosely defined area along the south bank of the River Thames in the London borough of Lambeth. It is bordered to the east by Bankside and extends approximately from Blackfriars Bridge (east) to Westminster Bridge (southwest). South Bank is home to a major arts complex—South Bank
- South Beach (Miami, Florida, United States)
Art Deco: …1930s the style took over South Beach in Miami, Florida, producing an area known as the Art Deco historic district.
- South Bedfordshire (district, England, United Kingdom)
South Bedfordshire, former district, Central Bedfordshire unitary authority, south-central England. The former district (1974–2009), part of the former administrative county of Bedfordshire, which was combined in 2009 with the former district of Mid Bedfordshire to form the unitary authority of
- South Bend (Indiana, United States)
South Bend, city, seat (1831) of St. Joseph county, northern Indiana, U.S. It lies along the St. Joseph River, adjacent to Mishawaka (east) and 94 miles (151 km) east-southeast of Chicago. René-Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle, the French explorer, visited the locality in 1679, and under the old
- South Bihar Plains (plains, India)
South Bihar Plains, southern part of the Middle Ganges Plain, Bihar state, eastern India. Bounded by the Ganges (Ganga) River and the North Bihar Plains to the north, the Bengal basin to the east, the Chota Nagpur plateau to the south, and the Ayodhya (Oudh) Plains to the west, the South Bihar
- South Bridge (bridge, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Edinburgh: Edinburgh’s bridges: Two of these, the South Bridge (1788) and the King George IV Bridge (1834), are multiple-arch constructions that span the Cowgate ravine. These new bridges opened the south to rapid expansion. In the same period Waterloo Bridge, with its Regency Arch (1820), opened the eastern slopes of Calton Hill…
- South Bucks (district, England, United Kingdom)
South Bucks, district, administrative and historic county of Buckinghamshire, England. The River Misbourne drains the district’s northeastern part. South Bucks’s boundary with Greater London to the east follows roughly across the Grand Union Canal, and the River Thames separates it from the county
- South by Southwest (music, film, and interactive media conference, Austin, Texas, United States)
South by Southwest, annual music, film, and interactive media conference held in Austin, Texas, U.S. South by Southwest (SXSW) began in 1987 as the South by Southwest Music and Media Conference when a promotion company, South by Southwest, Inc., decided to showcase the eclectic Austin music scene
- South by Southwest Music and Media Conference & Festival (music, film, and interactive media conference, Austin, Texas, United States)
South by Southwest, annual music, film, and interactive media conference held in Austin, Texas, U.S. South by Southwest (SXSW) began in 1987 as the South by Southwest Music and Media Conference when a promotion company, South by Southwest, Inc., decided to showcase the eclectic Austin music scene
- South Caicos (island, Turks and Caicos Islands)
Turks and Caicos Islands: …consists of six principal islands—South Caicos, East Caicos, Middle (or Grand) Caicos, North Caicos, Providenciales, and West Caicos—and several cays. Only six of the larger cays and two of the smaller cays are inhabited. More than four-fifths of the population lives on three islands: South Caicos, Providenciales (commonly called…
- South Cambridgeshire (district, England, United Kingdom)
South Cambridgeshire, district, administrative county of Cambridgeshire, east-central England. The district lies almost entirely within the historic county of Cambridgeshire, except for the area around Great Chishill, which belongs to the historic county of Essex. It encircles the administratively
- South Carolina (state, United States)
South Carolina, constituent state of the United States of America, one of the 13 original colonies. It lies on the southern Eastern Seaboard of the United States. Shaped like an inverted triangle with an east-west base of 285 miles (459 km) and a north-south extent of about 225 miles (360 km), the
- South Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical Institute (university, Orangeburg, South Carolina, United States)
South Carolina State University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Orangeburg, South Carolina, U.S. A Historically Black College and University (HBCU), South Carolina State offers numerous bachelor’s degree programs through schools of Applied Professional Sciences, Arts and
- South Carolina Canal and Railroad Company (American company)
railroad: The South Carolina Railroad: …to the older and larger South Carolina port. Theirs was considered mainly as a regional rail line, which began service with a single locomotive. The hope was that the early years of operation would earn enough profit that the line might be improved on retained earnings and that success for…
- South Carolina College (university system, South Carolina, United States)
University of South Carolina, coeducational U.S. state university system based in South Carolina’s capital city of Columbia. In addition to the main campus at Columbia, there are four-year branch campuses at Aiken and Spartanburg and two-year regional campuses at Union, Sumter, Beaufort, Lancaster,
- South Carolina Exposition and Protest (work by Calhoun)
Nullification Crisis: Doctrine of nullification and the Tariff of Abominations: …19, the state legislature issued South Carolina Exposition and Protest, which declared the tariff unconstitutional. Secretly drafted by Vice Pres. John C. Calhoun (whose name did not appear on it), the paper outlined the state’s grievances and furthered the nullification doctrine.
- South Carolina Military Academy (college, Charleston, South Carolina, United States)
The Citadel, public military college located in Charleston, South Carolina, U.S. All undergraduate daytime students, known as cadets, are required to participate in one of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps programs. The college offers bachelor’s degree programs in business, education,
- South Carolina Railroad (American railroad)
railroad: The South Carolina Railroad: …Charleston launched an early railroad—the South Carolina Railroad—which at 130 miles was by some measure the longest rail line in the world when it opened in 1833. But it was constructed very cheaply. Where it could not be laid on crossties placed directly on the flat or gently sloping surface…
- South Carolina Rice Plantation, The (work by Allston)
Robert Allston: … in 1821, and his papers, The South Carolina Rice Plantation, provide important agricultural, political, and social information about the pre-Civil War South. By scientifically draining and reclaiming swamps in his state, he developed one of the last great rice plantations in the Atlantic coast lowlands. He was also the author…
- South Carolina State University (university, Orangeburg, South Carolina, United States)
South Carolina State University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Orangeburg, South Carolina, U.S. A Historically Black College and University (HBCU), South Carolina State offers numerous bachelor’s degree programs through schools of Applied Professional Sciences, Arts and
- South Carolina, flag of (United States state flag)
U.S. state flag consisting of a dark blue field (background) with a white Sabal palmetto in the centre and a white crescent in the upper hoist corner.On September 13, 1775, a blue flag with a white crescent in its upper hoist corner was raised by anti-British forces at a fort in Charleston Harbor.
- South Carolina, University of (university system, South Carolina, United States)
University of South Carolina, coeducational U.S. state university system based in South Carolina’s capital city of Columbia. In addition to the main campus at Columbia, there are four-year branch campuses at Aiken and Spartanburg and two-year regional campuses at Union, Sumter, Beaufort, Lancaster,
- South Cascade Glacier (glacier, Washington, United States)
glacier: Mass balance of mountain glaciers: …the temperate, maritime glaciers is South Cascade Glacier, in western Washington. Its activity index is high, normally about 17 millimetres per metre (0.2 inch per foot); the yearly snow accumulation averages about 3.1 metres of water-equivalent; and the equilibrium line is at the relatively low altitude of 1,900 metres. This…
- South Caucasian culture (prehistoric Asian culture)
history of Transcaucasia: A South Caucasian, or Kura-Aras, culture, again associated with rich metalwork and characterized also by tholoi (beehive-shaped tombs), cyclopean masonry (characterized by large, irregular stone blocks fitted without mortar), and burnished black pottery with incised spiral decoration, dates from the late 3rd millennium bc. Evidence of…
- South Caucasian languages
Kartvelian languages, family of languages including Georgian, Svan, Mingrelian, and Laz that are spoken south of the chief range of the Caucasus. A brief treatment of Kartvelian languages follows. For full treatment, see Caucasian languages. Of the Kartvelian language family, only Georgian, the
- South Centre (international think tank)
Boutros Boutros-Ghali: …he chaired the board of South Centre, an intergovernmental think tank for developing countries. He supported the Campaign for the Establishment of a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly, a movement to establish citizens’ representation at the UN, from its founding in April 2007.
- South Charleston (West Virginia, United States)
South Charleston, city, Kanawha county, western West Virginia, U.S. It lies across the Kanawha River from Charleston. South Charleston was founded in 1916, and its development began with the establishment of several chemical companies and a U.S. naval ordnance plant (1917). The ordnance plant was
- South China (ancient continent)
Cambrian Period: Paleogeography: …suggest that present-day North and South China were on separate tectonic plates; however, extensive carbonate deposits in both regions indicate that both plates were found in low latitudes during the Cambrian. The fossil assemblages of South China have strong similarities with those of both Australia and Kazakhstan, but details of…
- South China Sea (sea, Pacific Ocean)
South China Sea, arm of the western Pacific Ocean that borders the Southeast Asian mainland. It is bounded on the northeast by the Taiwan Strait (by which it is connected to the East China Sea); on the east by Taiwan and the Philippines; on the southeast and south by Borneo, the southern limit of
- South China Sea, territorial disputes in the
territorial disputes in the South China Sea, series of conflicts arising from the overlapping territorial claims of several countries that border the South China Sea. In recent decades China has been widely seen as the conflicts’ primary driver. While countries have long disagreed on the sea’s
- South China Society (Chinese literary society)
Tian Han: Tian also founded the South China Society to experiment in and popularize modern vernacular drama, and he initiated the Nanguo Fortnightly as the organ of the society. His earliest works include the sentimental plays Kafeidian zhi yiye (1920; “A Night in a Café”) and Huohu zhi ye (1924; “The…
- South China tiger (mammal)
tiger: Tigers and humans: The South China tiger (P. tigris amoyensis) is the most critically endangered, and many researchers consider the subspecies extinct in the wild since none have been observed in the wild since the 1970s. Captive South China tigers in zoos numbered about 150 individuals as of 2019.…
- South Chŏlla (province, South Korea)
South Jeolla, do (province), extreme southwestern South Korea. It is bounded by North Jeolla province (north), South Gyeongsang province (east), Jeju Strait (south), and the Yellow Sea (west). Its coastline, including nearly 2,000 islands, of which three-fourths are uninhabited, is about 3,800
- South Chu (ridge, Altai Mountains)
Altai Mountains: Geology: …North (Severo) Chu, and the South (Yuzhno) Chu—tower more than 13,000 feet (4,000 metres) in elevation, running latitudinally in the central and eastern portions of the sector of the system within the Altay republic. The Tabyn-Bogdo-Ola (Mongolian: Tavan Bogd Uul), the Mönh Hayrhan Uul, and other western ridges of the…
- South Chungcheong (province, South Korea)
South Chungcheong, do (province), west-central South Korea. Facing the Yellow Sea to the west, it is bounded on the north by Gyeonggi province, on the east by North Chungcheong province, and on the south by North Jeolla province. Daejeon—administratively designated a metropolitan city with
- South Chungcheong (province, South Korea)
South Chungcheong, do (province), west-central South Korea. Facing the Yellow Sea to the west, it is bounded on the north by Gyeonggi province, on the east by North Chungcheong province, and on the south by North Jeolla province. Daejeon—administratively designated a metropolitan city with
- South City (area, Seoul, South Korea)
Seoul: City site: Known as Gangnam (“South River”), or “South City”—as opposed to Gangpuk (“North River”), or “North City,” north of the Han—the affluent area contains more than half the city’s population and, correspondingly, supplies half the local tax income. Gangnam is characterized by high-rise apartment blocks and new office…
- South Cushitic languages
Cushitic languages: …Kemant, Kwara, Xamtage, and Awngi; South Cushitic (spoken mainly in Tanzania), including Iraqw, Burunge, and Gorowa, the hybrid language Maʾa/Mbugu, and (in Kenya) Dahalo; Highland East Cushitic, including Burji, Sidamo, Kambata, and Hadiyya; Lowland East Cushitic, including Dasenech, Arbore, Saho-Afar, and Oromo and its close
- South Daitō Island (island, Pacific Ocean)
Daitō Islands: North Daitō (Kita-Daitō) and South Daitō (Minami-Daitō) islands are the largest of the group and lie close to one another, while the smaller Oki-Daitō Island lies about 93 miles (150 km) south of them. North and South Daitō have a combined area of 15.7 square miles (40.5 square km).…
- South Dakota (state, United States)
South Dakota, constituent state of the United States of America. South Dakota became the 40th state of the union on November 2, 1889. The state has two unique physical features: it contains the geographic centre of the United States, which is located just north of Belle Fourche, and it has its own
- South Dakota Badlands (region, South Dakota, United States)
Badlands, barren region covering some 2,000 square miles (5,200 square km) of southwestern South Dakota, U.S. It has an extremely rugged landscape almost devoid of vegetation. It was created by cloudbursts that cut deep gullies in poorly cemented bedrock; its extensive fossil deposits have yielded
- South Dakota School of Mines and Technology (school, Rapid City, South Dakota, United States)
South Dakota: Education: The South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in Rapid City (1885) is a specialty school for students pursuing science and engineering careers. Private liberal-arts colleges include Augustana College (1860) in Sioux Falls, the University of Sioux Falls (1883), Dakota Wesleyan University (1885) in Mitchell, Presentation…
- South Dakota State University (university, Brookings, South Dakota, United States)
South Dakota State University, public coeducational institution of higher learning in Brookings, eastern South Dakota, U.S. It was established by an act of the Dakota Territorial Legislature in 1881 as a land-grant college, under the provisions of the Morrill Act of 1862. The Agricultural
- South Dakota, flag of (United States state flag)
U.S. state flag consisting of a blue field (background) with the state seal in the centre encircled with the name of the state and the inscription “The Mount Rushmore State.”In the early 20th century the secretary of the state historical society, Doane Robinson, worked with the state senator Ernest
- South Dakota, University of (university, Vermillion, South Dakota, United States)
University of South Dakota, public coeducational institution of higher learning in Vermillion, southeastern South Dakota, U.S. It was established by the Dakota Territorial Legislature in 1862, and it opened in 1882. It was the first public institution of higher education in the Dakotas. Total
- South Danvers (Massachusetts, United States)
Peabody, city, Essex county, northeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies 17 miles (27 km) northeast of Boston. Originally part of Salem, it became part of Danvers in 1752 and was separately incorporated as the town of South Danvers in 1855. In 1868 it was renamed to honour the philanthropist George
- South Derbyshire (district, England, United Kingdom)
South Derbyshire, district, administrative and historic county of Derbyshire, England. Undulating arable land is interspersed with meadowland in the valleys of the Rivers Derwent, Dove, and Trent, although the Trent valley also has electric-power stations and gravel-extraction sites. Swadlincote is
- South Downs (play by Hare)
David Hare: …the 2008 financial crisis; and South Downs (2011), a one-act play about a solitary schoolboy’s struggles with friendship in the 1960s. Behind the Beautiful Forevers (2014) was a stage adaptation of a nonfiction volume about a poverty-stricken area of Mumbai. The Moderate Soprano (2015) dramatized the founding of the Glyndebourne…
- South Dravidian languages
Dravidian languages: South Dravidian languages: Among the nonliterary South Dravidian languages, Tulu is spoken by the largest population, some 1.7 million people. Most reside in the Dakshina Kannada district of Karnataka and the Cannanore district of Kerala on the west coast. The Brahman dialect of Tulu is…
- South Dublin (county, Ireland)
South Dublin, county in the province of Leinster, eastern Ireland. The county of South Dublin was created in 1994 when the geographic county of Dublin was split administratively into three separate units. It now constitutes the southwestern and western component of the Greater Dublin metropolitan
- South Dum Dum (India)
Dum Dum: …Dum, North Dum Dum, and South Dum Dum. All three are part of the Kolkata urban agglomeration. North Dum Dum still contains large rural enclaves. South Dum Dum constitutes the northern fringe of Greater Kolkata.
- South Duxbury (Massachusetts, United States)
Duxbury, town (township), Plymouth county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies on Duxbury Bay (an inlet of Cape Cod Bay), 33 miles (53 km) south of Boston, and includes the villages of Duxbury and South Duxbury. Settled about 1628, it counts among its founders the Pilgrim colonists Myles Standish,
- South East (region, England, United Kingdom)
England: The South East: The South East, centred on London, has a population and wealth to match many nation-states. This is the dominant area of England and the most rapidly growing one, although planning controls such as greenbelts have restricted the urban sprawl of London since the…
- South East Asia Command (international military organization)
World War II: Burma, autumn 1942–summer 1943: …appointed supreme commander of the South East Asia Command (SEAC), and Stilwell was appointed deputy to Mountbatten. Stilwell at the same time was chief of staff to Chiang Kai-shek. The British–Indian forces destined for Burma meanwhile constituted the 14th Army, under Lieutenant General William Slim, whose operational control Stilwell agreed…
- South East Asia–Middle East–Western Europe 3 Fiber Optic Cable Network (cable network)
Djibouti: Transportation and telecommunications: …East Asia–Middle East–Western Europe–3 (SEA-ME-WE-3) telecommunications system.
- South Eastern (language)
English language: Middle English: …considerably extended and was called South Eastern accordingly. All five Middle English dialects (Northern, West Midland, East Midland, South Western, and South Eastern) went their own ways and developed their own characteristics. The so-called Katherine Group of writings (c. 1180–1210), associated with Hereford, a town not far from the Welsh…
- South End House (settlement agency, Boston, Massachusetts, United States)
social settlement: …established Andover House, later called South End House, in Boston. The movement then spread to most countries of western Europe and to Southeast Asia and Japan.
- South English Legendary (Middle English work)
English literature: Didactic poetry: …especially popular work was the South English Legendary, which began as a miscellaneous collection of saints’ lives but was expanded by later redactors and rearranged in the order of the church calendar. The didactic tradition continued into the 14th century with Robert Mannyng’s Handling Sin, a confessional manual whose expected…
- South Equatorial Current (ocean current)
Atlantic Ocean: The South Atlantic: …southeast trade winds maintain the South Equatorial Current, which flows toward the west where it divides into two branches: one that continues to the Northern Hemisphere and enters the Caribbean—together with a small amount of water from the North Equatorial Current—as the Guiana (Guyana) Current and one that turns south…
- South Flevoland Polder (region, Netherlands)
IJsselmeer Polders: The South (Zuidelijk) Flevoland Polder (166 square miles [430 square km]) was completed in 1968. A fifth potential polder is the Markerwaard Polder in southwest IJsselmeer. Under construction since 1963, its diking was partially complete by the mid-1980s, but plans were then abandoned.
- South Florida, University of (university, Tampa, Florida, United States)
American Athletic Conference: Memphis, South Florida, and Tulsa as well as East Carolina, Southern Methodist, Temple, Tulane, and Wichita State universities and the United States Naval Academy
- South Fork Dam (dam, Pennsylvania, United States)
Johnstown: …pm on May 31, the South Fork Dam, a poorly maintained earthfill dam holding a major upstream reservoir, collapsed after heavy rains, sending a great wall of water rushing down the Conemaugh River valley at speeds of 20 to 40 miles (32 to 64 km) per hour. At 4:07 pm…
- South Geomagnetic Pole (geophysics)
South Pole: …it coincide with the geomagnetic South Pole, the southern end of the Earth’s geomagnetic field (this pole also moves; during the early 1990s it was located about 79°13′ S, 108°44′ E). The geographic pole, at an elevation of some 9,300 feet (2,830 metres; the elevation also changes constantly) above sea…
- South Georgia (island, Atlantic Ocean)
South Georgia, mountainous barren island in the South Atlantic Ocean, 800 miles (1,300 km) east-southeast of the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas). It is part of the British overseas territory of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, although Argentina also claims the territory. South
- South Georgia Teachers College (university, Statesboro, Georgia, United States)
Georgia Southern University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Statesboro, Georgia, U.S., about 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Savannah. It is part of the University System of Georgia. The university consists of six colleges and offers more than 85 bachelor’s degree programs
- South Germanic language (language)
Germanic languages: The emergence of Germanic languages: …Germanic; and in central Germany, South Germanic. A number of linguistic developments from this period are shared by North Sea Germanic and South Germanic (but not by North Germanic), and the term West Germanic is used in recognition of the strong affinities between these two groups. During this same period,…
- South Gloucestershire (unitary authority, England, United Kingdom)
South Gloucestershire, unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Gloucestershire, southwestern England, directly north and east of the city of Bristol. South Gloucestershire is mainly a fertile clay valley extending eastward from the mud flats of the River Severn estuary. The eastern
- South Grafton (New South Wales, Australia)
Grafton: …the municipalities of Grafton and South Grafton (both named for the duke of Grafton) on opposite banks of the river (bridged in 1932). The district is a communications hub, lying at the junction of the Pacific and Gwydir highways, with air and rail links to Brisbane, Queensland (north), and Sydney…
- South Gyeongsang (province, South Korea)
South Gyeongsang, do (province), southeastern South Korea. It is bordered to the south by the Korea Strait, to the west by South and North Jeolla provinces, and to the north by North Gyeongsang province. Busan and Ulsan—administratively designated metropolitan cities with province-level
- South Gyeongsang (province, South Korea)
South Gyeongsang, do (province), southeastern South Korea. It is bordered to the south by the Korea Strait, to the west by South and North Jeolla provinces, and to the north by North Gyeongsang province. Busan and Ulsan—administratively designated metropolitan cities with province-level
- South Hadley (Massachusetts, United States)
South Hadley, town (township), Hampshire county, south-central Massachusetts, U.S. It lies along the Connecticut River. Settled in 1684 as part of Hadley, it was recognized as a separate precinct in 1732, incorporated as a district in 1753, and reincorporated as a town in 1775. South Hadley
- South Halmahera–West New Guinea languages
Austronesian languages: South Halmahera–West New Guinea (SHWNG): This small group of Austronesian languages is found in the northern Moluccan island of Halmahera and in the Doberai Peninsula (also called Vogelkop or Bird’s Head) of western New Guinea. Preliminary descriptions exist only for Buli of Halmahera and Numfor-Biak…