- Sancho III Garcés (king of Pamplona [Navarre])
Sancho III Garcés was the king of Pamplona (Navarre) from about 1000 to 1035, the son of García II (or III). Sancho established Navarrese hegemony over all the Christian states of Spain at a time when the caliphate of Córdoba was in a state of turmoil. Sancho was uninterested in a crusade against
- Sancho IV (king of Castile and Leon)
Sancho IV was the king of Castile and Leon from 1284 to 1295, the second son of Alfonso X. Though ambitious and ruthless, he was also an able politician and a cultivated man. In 1275 his elder brother, Fernando de la Cerda, was killed, leaving a son, Alfonso de la Cerda, heir to Alfonso X. Sancho,
- Sancho IV (king of Navarre)
Sancho IV was the king of Pamplona (Navarre) from 1054 to 1076, son of García III (or IV). Sancho had to contend with Castilian irredentism and Aragonese ambition. His act of persuading the Moorish king of Saragossa to become his vassal offended Alfonso VI of Castile, who invaded Pamplona (1074)
- Sancho o Capelo (king of Portugal)
Sancho II was the fourth king of Portugal, son of Afonso II and of Urraca, who was the daughter of Alfonso VIII of Castile. Factions were so fostered during Sancho’s minority that his later government was never anything more than a series of vain attempts to achieve political stability in the
- Sancho o Encapuchado (king of Portugal)
Sancho II was the fourth king of Portugal, son of Afonso II and of Urraca, who was the daughter of Alfonso VIII of Castile. Factions were so fostered during Sancho’s minority that his later government was never anything more than a series of vain attempts to achieve political stability in the
- Sancho o Funador (king of Portugal)
Sancho I was the second king of Portugal (1185–1211), son of Afonso I. Sancho’s reign was marked by a resettlement of the depopulated areas of his country, by the establishment of new towns, and by the rebuilding of frontier strongholds and castles. To facilitate his plans, he encouraged foreign
- Sancho o Povoador (king of Portugal)
Sancho I was the second king of Portugal (1185–1211), son of Afonso I. Sancho’s reign was marked by a resettlement of the depopulated areas of his country, by the establishment of new towns, and by the rebuilding of frontier strongholds and castles. To facilitate his plans, he encouraged foreign
- Sancho Panza (fictional character)
Sancho Panza, Don Quixote’s squire in the novel Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes, a short, pot-bellied peasant whose gross appetite, common sense, and vulgar wit serve as a foil to the mad idealism of his master. He is famous for his many pertinent proverbs. Cervantes used the psychological
- Sancho Ramírez (king of Aragon and Pamplona [Navarre])
Sancho Ramírez was the king of Aragon from 1063 to 1094 and of Pamplona (or Navarre; as Sancho V Ramírez) from 1076 to 1094, the son of Ramiro I of Aragon. After the murder of Sancho IV of Navarre, Sancho Ramírez, with Navarrese consent, became king of Navarre, forestalling the ambition of Alfonso
- Sancho the Brave (king of Castile and Leon)
Sancho IV was the king of Castile and Leon from 1284 to 1295, the second son of Alfonso X. Though ambitious and ruthless, he was also an able politician and a cultivated man. In 1275 his elder brother, Fernando de la Cerda, was killed, leaving a son, Alfonso de la Cerda, heir to Alfonso X. Sancho,
- Sancho the Capuched (king of Portugal)
Sancho II was the fourth king of Portugal, son of Afonso II and of Urraca, who was the daughter of Alfonso VIII of Castile. Factions were so fostered during Sancho’s minority that his later government was never anything more than a series of vain attempts to achieve political stability in the
- Sancho the Cowled (king of Portugal)
Sancho II was the fourth king of Portugal, son of Afonso II and of Urraca, who was the daughter of Alfonso VIII of Castile. Factions were so fostered during Sancho’s minority that his later government was never anything more than a series of vain attempts to achieve political stability in the
- Sancho the Desired (king of Castile)
Sancho III was the king of Castile from 1157 to 1158, the elder son of the Spanish emperor Alfonso VII. His father’s will partitioned the realm between his two sons, Sancho III receiving Castile and Ferdinand II receiving Leon. After a military show of force, Sancho was able to reaffirm by treaty
- Sancho the Fat (king of Leon)
Sancho I was the king of the Spanish state of Leon from 956, a younger son of Ramiro II. After succeeding his brother, Ordoño II, Sancho was overthrown by a revolt of his nobles and replaced by his cousin Ordoño IV. Sancho sought help from the Umayyad caliph ʿAbd ar-Raḥmān III, who helped him
- Sancho the Founder (king of Portugal)
Sancho I was the second king of Portugal (1185–1211), son of Afonso I. Sancho’s reign was marked by a resettlement of the depopulated areas of his country, by the establishment of new towns, and by the rebuilding of frontier strongholds and castles. To facilitate his plans, he encouraged foreign
- Sancho the Great (king of Pamplona [Navarre])
Sancho III Garcés was the king of Pamplona (Navarre) from about 1000 to 1035, the son of García II (or III). Sancho established Navarrese hegemony over all the Christian states of Spain at a time when the caliphate of Córdoba was in a state of turmoil. Sancho was uninterested in a crusade against
- Sancho the Populator (king of Portugal)
Sancho I was the second king of Portugal (1185–1211), son of Afonso I. Sancho’s reign was marked by a resettlement of the depopulated areas of his country, by the establishment of new towns, and by the rebuilding of frontier strongholds and castles. To facilitate his plans, he encouraged foreign
- Sancho the Strong (king of Navarre)
Sancho VII was the king of Navarre (Pamplona) from 1194 to 1234, the son of Sancho VI. Sancho was a swashbuckling but enigmatic personality who offended the Holy See by his friendship with the Muslims; he was in Africa in the service of the Almohads (1198–c. 1200). His absence cost Navarre the
- Sancho the Strong (king of Castile)
Sancho II was the king of Castile from 1065 to 1072, the eldest son of Ferdinand I. He was allocated the kingdom of Castile in his father’s will, Leon and Galicia being given to his brothers. He refused to accept this division and dispossessed García of Galicia by force (1071). Alfonso VI of Leon,
- Sancho the Wise (king of Navarre)
Sancho VI was the king of Navarre (Pamplona) from 1150 and son of García IV (or V) the Restorer. Sancho was the first to be called king of Navarre; previous kings were known as kings of Pamplona. In 1151 Castile and Aragon signed at Tudillén a treaty for the partition of Navarre. By skilled
- Sancho V Ramírez (king of Aragon and Pamplona [Navarre])
Sancho Ramírez was the king of Aragon from 1063 to 1094 and of Pamplona (or Navarre; as Sancho V Ramírez) from 1076 to 1094, the son of Ramiro I of Aragon. After the murder of Sancho IV of Navarre, Sancho Ramírez, with Navarrese consent, became king of Navarre, forestalling the ambition of Alfonso
- Sancho VI (king of Navarre)
Sancho VI was the king of Navarre (Pamplona) from 1150 and son of García IV (or V) the Restorer. Sancho was the first to be called king of Navarre; previous kings were known as kings of Pamplona. In 1151 Castile and Aragon signed at Tudillén a treaty for the partition of Navarre. By skilled
- Sancho VII (king of Navarre)
Sancho VII was the king of Navarre (Pamplona) from 1194 to 1234, the son of Sancho VI. Sancho was a swashbuckling but enigmatic personality who offended the Holy See by his friendship with the Muslims; he was in Africa in the service of the Almohads (1198–c. 1200). His absence cost Navarre the
- Sanchong (Taiwan)
San-ch’ung, former municipality (shih, or shi), northern Taiwan. In 2010 it became a city district of the special municipality of New Taipei City, when the former T’ai-pei county was administratively reorganized. San-ch’ung lies in the northern part of Taiwan’s western coastal plain on the west
- Sanchuniathon (ancient Phoenician writer)
Sanchuniathon was an ancient Phoenician writer. All information about him is derived from the works of Philo of Byblos (flourished ad 100). Excavations at Ras Shamra (ancient Ugarit) in Syria in 1929 revealed Phoenician documents supporting much of Sanchuniathon’s information on Phoenician
- Sanci (historical site, India)
Sanchi, historic site, west-central Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It lies in an upland plateau region, just west of the Betwa River and about 5 miles (8 km) southwest of Vidisha. On a flat-topped sandstone hill that rises some 300 feet (90 metres) above the surrounding country stands India’s
- Sancious, David (American musician)
Bruce Springsteen: Without The Big Man: …Street Band band members, pianist David Sancious and drummer Vini Lopez—were selected in 2013 for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as members of the E Street Band.
- sancocho (food)
sancocho, a traditional Latin American stew consisting of fish or meat cooked in a broth with root vegetables and plantains and seasoned with cilantro or culantro. The word sancocho is derived from the Spanish verb sancochar, meaning “to parboil.” It is the national dish of Panama and one of the
- Sancroft, William (archbishop of Canterbury)
William Sancroft was the archbishop of Canterbury, leader of a group of seven bishops who were imprisoned for opposing policies of the Roman Catholic king James II. In 1651 Sancroft was dismissed as a fellow at the University of Cambridge for refusing to take the Oath of Engagement, a declaration
- Sanct Hansaften-spil (work by Oehlenschläger)
Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger: …not only “Guldhornene” but also Sanct Hansaften-spil (“A Midsummer Night’s Play”); this latter work is a lyrical drama combining literary satire with poetic discourses on love and nature. His Poetiske skrifter (1805; “Poetic Writings”) contains two long cycles of lyric poems and Aladdin, a poetic drama on the writer’s own…
- Sancta Sophia (work by Baker)
Augustine Baker: …death from the plague, his Sancta Sophia, a systematic work compiled from his treatises, was published. It covers the entire range of ascetic and mystic theology. His other writings available in print are Secretum, a commentary on the Cloud of Unknowing, in which the first section is somewhat of a…
- Sancti Spíritus (Cuba)
Sancti Spíritus, city, central Cuba. It is located on the Yayabo River, a tributary of the Zaza River. The settlement was founded in 1516 on the Tuinicú River, but it was moved to the banks of the Yayabo in 1524. It is the oldest city of interior Cuba, and narrow crooked streets, old churches, and
- sanctification (religion)
grace: …individuals for their regeneration and sanctification. The English term is the usual translation for the Greek charis, which occurs in the New Testament about 150 times (two-thirds of these in writings attributed to St. Paul). Although the word must sometimes be translated in other ways, the fundamental meaning in the…
- sanction (social science)
sanction, in the social sciences, a reaction (or the threat or promise of a reaction) by members of a social group indicating approval or disapproval of a mode of conduct and serving to enforce behavioral standards of the group. Punishment (negative sanction) and reward (positive sanction) regulate
- sanction (international relations)
economic statecraft: Forms and uses: …including both positive and negative sanctions. Negative sanctions are actual or threatened punishments, whereas positive sanctions are actual or promised rewards. Examples of negative sanctions include the following: refusing to export (embargoes), refusing to import (boycotts), covert refusals to trade (blacklists), purchases intended to keep goods out of the hands…
- Sanctis, Francesco De (Italian critic)
Francesco De Sanctis was an Italian literary critic whose work contributed significantly to the understanding of Italian literature and civilization. De Sanctis, a liberal patriot, took part in the Neapolitan revolution of 1848 and for some years was a prisoner of the Bourbons. He then lived in
- Sanctorale (Christianity)
church year: The major church calendars: …of Christmas, and (2) the Proper of Saints (Sanctorale), other commemorations on fixed dates of the year. Every season and holy day is a celebration, albeit with different emphases, of the total revelation and redemption of Christ, which are “made present at all times” or proclaim “the paschal mystery as…
- Sanctorius (Italian physician)
Santorio Santorio was an Italian physician who was the first to employ instruments of precision in the practice of medicine and whose studies of basal metabolism introduced quantitative experimental procedure into medical research. Santorio was a graduate of the University of Padua (M.D., 1582),
- Sanctorum Communio (thesis by Bonhoeffer)
Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Early training: …doctoral thesis, Sanctorum Communio (1930; The Communion of Saints), in which he tried to combine a sociological and a theological understanding of the church, and in Akt und Sein (1931; Act and Being), in which he traces the influence of transcendental philosophy and ontology—as well as Kantian and post-Kantian theories…
- Sanctuary (cave chamber, Trois Frères, France)
Trois Frères: …interior chamber known as the Sanctuary. This area is filled with some 280 often-overlapping engraved figures of bison, horses, stags, reindeer, ibex, and mammoths. The great majority probably date to the mid-Magdalenian Period (about 14,000 years ago). The Sanctuary is dominated by the cave’s most famous figure, a small image,…
- Sanctuary (film by Richardson [1961])
Christology: Film: In Tony Richardson’s Sanctuary (1961; based on two stories of William Faulkner), Stevens’s Shane (1953), and Clint Eastwood’s Pale Rider (1985), for example, a figure sacrifices himself (Sanctuary) or joins the side of good in a fight between good and evil (Shane, Pale Rider).
- sanctuary (international law)
guerrilla warfare: Sanctuary and support: …alone prosper, it must control safe areas to which it can retire for recuperation and repair of arms and equipment and where recruits can be indoctrinated, trained, and equipped. Such areas are traditionally located in remote, rugged terrain, usually mountains, forests, and jungles.
- sanctuary (religion)
sanctuary, in religion, a sacred place, set apart from the profane, ordinary world. Originally, sanctuaries were natural locations, such as groves or hills, where the divine or sacred was believed to be especially present. The concept was later extended to include man-made structures; e.g., the
- Sanctuary (novel by Faulkner)
Sanctuary, novel by William Faulkner, published in 1931. The book’s depictions of degraded sexuality generated both controversy and spectacular sales, making it the author’s only popular success during his lifetime. A vision of a decayed South, the novel pitted idealistic lawyer Horace Benbow
- sanctuary city
United States: ICE enforcement and removal operations: …withholding of federal funds from “sanctuary” cities that had chosen to provide refuge for illegal immigrants. That order was answered with defiant statements by a number of big-city mayors. Nevertheless, at the administration’s behest, in February the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency began an aggressive effort to apprehend and…
- sanctuary knocker (architecture)
sanctuary knocker, in architecture, knocker on the outer door of a Christian church. The sanctuary knocker could be a simple metal ring, which accounts for its other name of sanctuary ring, or it could be highly ornamental, as in the Norman example at Durham cathedral in England, dating from the
- sanctuary ring (architecture)
sanctuary knocker, in architecture, knocker on the outer door of a Christian church. The sanctuary knocker could be a simple metal ring, which accounts for its other name of sanctuary ring, or it could be highly ornamental, as in the Norman example at Durham cathedral in England, dating from the
- Sanctus (liturgical chant)
Gregorian chant: The Sanctus and Benedictus are probably from apostolic times. The usual Sanctus chants are neumatic. The Agnus Dei was brought into the Latin mass from the Eastern Church in the 7th century and is basically in neumatic style. The concluding Ite Missa Est and its substitute…
- Sancy diamond (gem)
Sancy diamond, fiery stone of Indian origin that is shaped like a peach pit and weighs 55 carats. It has a long history and has passed through many royal families. Purchased in Constantinople about 1570 by Nicolas Harlay de Sancy, the French ambassador to Turkey, it was lent to the French kings
- Sancy Hill (mountain, France)
Auvergne: Geography: …at the summit of the Puy de Sancy, in Puy-de-Dôme, which is the highest point in central France. The Vivarais Mountains top out at Mount Mézenc, 5,751 feet (1,753 metres) above Haute-Loire, while in Cantal, an area of high plateaus, volcanic peaks rise to the Plomb du Cantal, at 6,096…
- sand
sand, mineral, rock, or soil particles that range in diameter from 0.02 to 2 mm (0.0008–0.08 inch). Most of the rock-forming minerals that occur on the Earth’s surface are found in sand, but only a limited number are common in this form. Although in some localities feldspar, calcareous material,
- Sand aus den Urnen, Der (work by Celan)
Paul Celan: …his first collection of poems, Der Sand aus den Urnen (1948; “The Sand from the Urns”). From the outset his poetry was marked by a phantasmagoric perception of the terrors and injuries of reality and by a sureness of imagery and prosody.
- sand badger (mammal)
badger: The hog badger (Arctonyx collaris), also called the hog-nosed, or sand, badger, is a pale-clawed species of both lowland and mountainous regions in a range similar to that of ferret badgers. It is gray to black, with a black-and-white-striped head pattern and white throat, ears, and…
- sand bar (geology)
beach: …or several parallel, submarine, long-shore bars with intervening troughs may exist along sandy shores; if present, these bars constitute the last profile element.
- sand beach (landform)
coastal landforms: Landforms of depositional coasts: …that is characterized by well-developed sand beaches typically formed on long barrier islands with a few widely spaced tidal inlets. The barrier islands tend to be narrow and rather low in elevation. Longshore transport is extensive, and the inlets are often small and unstable. Jetties are commonly placed along the…
- sand blow (geology)
soil liquefaction: Liquefaction may also contribute to sand blows, which are also known as sand boils or sand volcanoes. Sand blows often accompany the liquefaction of sandy or silty soil. With the collapse of the soil’s granular structure, the density of the soil increases. This increased pressure squeezes the water out of…
- sand bluestem (plant)
bluestem: Sand bluestem (A. gerardii, subspecies hallii), with yellowish spikelets, grows on sand hills in the central and western United States. Broom sedge, or yellow bluestem (A. virginicus), and bushy beardgrass, or bush bluestem (A. glomeratus), are coarse grasses, unsuitable for forage, that grow in poor…
- sand boa (snake)
boa: …Indian, and African species of sand boa (genus Eryx) and the West African earth python (Charina reinhardtii), in addition to two North American species. Erycines are live-bearers (as opposed to egg layers) that have stout cylindrical bodies, blunt heads, and short tails. Most measure less than 70 cm (28 inches).…
- sand boil (geology)
soil liquefaction: Liquefaction may also contribute to sand blows, which are also known as sand boils or sand volcanoes. Sand blows often accompany the liquefaction of sandy or silty soil. With the collapse of the soil’s granular structure, the density of the soil increases. This increased pressure squeezes the water out of…
- sand bug (crustacean)
mole crab, (Emerita, or Hippa, talpoida), crab of the Atlantic beaches from New England to Mexico. It is so named from its digging mole-fashion in sand. The shell is about 3.75 centimetres (1.5 inches) long, somewhat egg-shaped and yellowish white with purplish markings. It lives on beaches in the
- sand casting (metallurgy)
metallurgy: Sand-casting: Sand-casting is widely used for making cast-iron and steel parts of medium to large size in which surface smoothness and dimensional precision are not of primary importance.
- Sand Castle (film by Coimbra [2017])
Nicholas Hoult: …job as their driver, and Sand Castle (both 2016), about the Iraq War. In Rebel in the Rye (2017), he starred as J.D. Salinger, author of The Catcher in the Rye. Continuing to show his versatility, Hoult played an 18th-century politician in The Favourite (2018), a historical drama about Queen…
- Sand Child, The (novel by Ben Jelloun)
Tahar Ben Jelloun: …until L’Enfant de sable (1985; The Sand Child), an imaginative, richly drawn novel that critiques gender roles in Arab society through the tale of a girl raised as a boy, that Ben Jelloun was accorded widespread praise and recognition. Its sequel, La Nuit sacrée (1987; The Sacred Night), won France’s…
- Sand County Almanac, A (work by Leopold)
Aldo Leopold: …an American environmentalist whose book A Sand County Almanac (1949) was read by millions and strongly influenced the budding environmental movement.
- sand crab (crustacean)
ghost crab, (genus Ocypode), any of approximately 20 species of shore crabs (order Decapoda of the class Crustacea). O. quadratus, the beach crabs noted for their running speed, occur on dry sand above the high-tide mark on the western Atlantic coast from New Jersey to Brazil. The crab, sandy or
- Sand Creek Declaration
Disciples of Christ: Controversy and separation: …churches in Illinois issued the Sand Creek Declaration, withdrawing fellowship from those practicing “innovations and corruptions.” In 1904 a separate “preacher list” issued unofficially by some conservative leaders certified their preachers for discounts on railway tickets. The Federal Religious Census of 1906 acknowledged the separation between Churches of Christ and…
- Sand Creek Massacre (United States history [1864])
Sand Creek Massacre, (November 29, 1864), controversial surprise attack upon a camp of Cheyenne and Arapaho people in southeastern Colorado Territory by a force of about 675 U.S. troops, mostly Colorado volunteers, under Col. John M. Chivington. The camp contained approximately 750 Cheyenne and
- Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site (historic site, Colorado, United States)
Sand Creek Massacre: Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site was opened in 2007 to preserve the location of the incident.
- sand cricket (insect)
Jerusalem cricket, (subfamily Stenopelmatinae), any of about 50 species of insects in the family Stenopelmatidae (order Orthoptera) that are related to grasshoppers and crickets. Jerusalem crickets are large, brownish, awkward insects that are found in Asia, South Africa, and both North and Central
- sand devil (meteorology)
dust devil, small, brief whirlwind occurring most frequently in the early afternoon when a land surface is heating rapidly. Dust devils are occasionally made visible by the lofting of dust, leaves, or other loose matter from the surface. See also
- sand diver (fish)
perciform: Annotated classification: Family Trichonotidae (sand divers) Resemble Percophiidae but body extremely elongated and dorsal fin unusually high; snout pointed; lips fringed; dive headfirst into sand. 8 species; tropical and subtropical Indo-Pacific oceans. Family Creediidae Elongate little fishes resembling Percophiidae; 16 species; coasts of Australia, Marshall and Mariana islands.
- sand dollar (echinoderm)
sand dollar, any of the invertebrate marine animals of the order Clypeastroida (class Echinoidea, phylum Echinodermata) that has a flat, disk-shaped body. They are close relatives of sea urchins and heart urchins. The sand dollar is particularly well adapted for burrowing in sandy substrates. Very
- sand dune
sand dune, any accumulation of sand grains shaped into a mound or ridge by the wind under the influence of gravity. Sand dunes are comparable to other forms that appear when a fluid moves over a loose bed, such as subaqueous “dunes” on the beds of rivers and tidal estuaries and sand waves on the
- sand eel (fish)
sand lance, any of about 18 species of marine fishes of the family Ammodytidae (order Perciformes). Sand lances are slim, elongated, usually silver fishes especially abundant in northern seas. Although eel-like in shape and movement, they are not true eels. The species range from about 20 to 46
- sand flea (crustacean)
sand flea, any of more than 60 terrestrial crustaceans of the family Talitridae (order Amphipoda) that are notable for their hopping ability. The European sand flea (Talitrus saltator), which is about 1.5 cm (0.6 inch) long, lives on sand beaches near the high-tide mark, remaining buried in the
- sand flounder (fish family)
pleuronectiform: Annotated classification: Family Paralichthyidae (sand flounders) Eyes usually sinistral; pelvic fin bases short, pectoral rays branched. About 16 genera and 105 species. Marine, present in all oceans, rarely in fresh water. Family Samaridae (crested flounders) Origin of dorsal in front of eyes; lateral line well developed or rudimentary; pelvic…
- sand fly (insect)
sand fly, any insect of the family Phlebotomidae (sometimes considered part of the family Psychodidae) of the order Diptera. The aquatic larvae live in the intertidal zone of coastal beaches, in mud, or in wet organic debris. Sand flies are of considerable medical importance: around the
- sand fly fever (pathology)
pappataci fever, acute infectious febrile disease caused by a phlebovirus (family Bunyaviridae) and producing temporary incapacitation, marked initially by abdominal symptoms, severe frontal headache, chills, fever, and joint and muscle pain. It is transmitted to humans by the bloodsucking female
- sand food (plant)
Lennooideae: … occur in southwestern North America: sand food (P. sonorae) and desert Christmas tree (P. arenarium). The succulent underground stems of sand food were used as food by Native Americans in what is now Arizona.
- sand food subfamily (plant subfamily)
Lennooideae, the sand food subfamily of the family Boraginaceae, composed of two genera and four species of parasitic plants. The unusual plants inhabit desert regions in Colombia, Venezuela, Mexico, and the southwestern United States, and many are considered rare. Though formerly treated as its
- sand fox (mammal)
fox: Classification: rueppelli (sand fox) Big-eared fox of the deserts of northern Africa southward to Sudan; also found in Saudi Arabia and southwestern Asia; weight usually 2 or 3 kg, length to 80 cm, including tail; coat sandy or silvery gray with black patches on the face. V.…
- sand fulgurite (mineral)
fulgurite: Sand fulgurites, the more common, are branching, more or less cylindrical tubes that are about one centimetre (one-half inch) to several centimetres in diameter; they are commonly less than 3 metres (10 feet) long but sometimes reach 20 m (66 ft). The central cavity is…
- sand gazelle (mammal)
gazelle: Asian gazelles: gazella), the goitred, or sand, gazelle (G. subgutturosa), the Arabian gazelle (G. arabica; now extinct), the Saudi gazelle (G. saudiya; now extinct in the wild), the Queen of Sheba’s gazelle (G. bilkis; now extinct), and the dorcas gazelle (G. dorcas). The dorcas gazelle also ranges into North…
- sand grouse (bird)
sandgrouse, (order Pteroclidiformes), any of 16 species of birds of Asian and African deserts. According to some systems of classification, sandgrouse are ranked with the plovers within the order Charadriiformes. Sandgrouses are about 22 to 40 cm (about 9 to 16 inches) long and have gray or brown
- Sand Hills (region, Nebraska, United States)
Sand Hills, region of grass-covered, stabilized sand dunes in the High Plains of north-central Nebraska, U.S. Extending 265 miles (425 km) across Nebraska and a portion of southern South Dakota, it covers some 19,300 square miles (50,000 square km). It lies mostly to the north of the Platte and
- sand hopper (crustacean)
sand flea, any of more than 60 terrestrial crustaceans of the family Talitridae (order Amphipoda) that are notable for their hopping ability. The European sand flea (Talitrus saltator), which is about 1.5 cm (0.6 inch) long, lives on sand beaches near the high-tide mark, remaining buried in the
- Sand Island (island, Pacific Ocean)
Midway Islands: …two main islands—Eastern (Green) and Sand islands. Its total land area is 2.4 square miles (6.2 square km). The climate is subtropical, with cool and wet winters and warm and dry summers.
- Sand Island (United States territory, Pacific Ocean)
Johnston Atoll, unincorporated territory of the United States in the central Pacific Ocean, about 825 miles (1,330 km) southwest of Honolulu. It consists of four small islands on a raised coral atoll formation that are partially enclosed on the north and west by a 7.5-mile (12-km) semicircular
- sand lance (fish)
sand lance, any of about 18 species of marine fishes of the family Ammodytidae (order Perciformes). Sand lances are slim, elongated, usually silver fishes especially abundant in northern seas. Although eel-like in shape and movement, they are not true eels. The species range from about 20 to 46
- sand love grass (plant)
love grass: sand love grass (E. trichodes), and weeping love grass (E. curvula) are forage species in southern North America. Weeping love grass, native to South Africa, was introduced elsewhere as an ornamental and later was used to reclaim abandoned or eroded areas formerly under cultivation. Stink…
- sand martin (bird)
martin: The sand martin, or bank swallow (Riparia riparia), a 12-centimetre (5-inch) brown and white bird, breeds throughout the Northern Hemisphere; it makes nest burrows in sandbanks. The house martin (Delichon urbica), blue-black above and white-rumped, is common in Europe. The African river martin (Pseudochelidon eurystomina) of…
- sand mountain
sand mountain, isolated mountain of sand formed in an open desert area by the action of strong winds blowing from various directions. These huge accumulations of sand may reach up to 300 metres (1,000 feet) in height in Saudi Arabia and in the Namib Desert. They generally remain stable for
- sand painting
sand painting, type of art that exists in highly developed forms among the Navajo and Pueblo Indians of the American Southwest and in simpler forms among several Plains and California Indian tribes. Although sand painting is an art form, it is valued among the Indians primarily for religious rather
- Sand Pebbles, The (film by Wise [1966])
The Sand Pebbles, American war film, released in 1966, that proved controversial for its parallels to the ongoing Vietnam War (1954–75). Steve McQueen earned his only Academy Award nomination for his portrayal of an alienated and disillusioned sailor. The Sand Pebbles opens in 1926 as China is
- Sand Point (Florida, United States)
Titusville, city, seat (1879) of Brevard county, east-central Florida, U.S., about 35 miles (55 km) east of Orlando. The city, on the Intracoastal Waterway, is situated on the west bank of the Indian River (a lagoon separated from the Atlantic Ocean by barrier islands) and is linked (via a causeway
- sand quillwort (plant)
quillwort: Major species: Sand quillwort (I. histrix), an inconspicuous terrestrial European species, has very narrow 5–7-cm (2–3-inch-) long leaves that curl back to the ground from a fat white tufted base.
- sand rat (rodent)
sand rat, either of two species of gerbils in the genus
- sand reed (plant)
beach grass, (genus Ammophila), genus of two species of sand-binding plants in the grass family (Poaceae). American beach grass (Ammophila breviligulata) grows along the Atlantic coast and in the Great Lakes region of North America. European beach grass (A. arenaria) is native to temperate coasts
- Sand River (river, Zimbabwe)
Precambrian: Structure and occurrence of granulite-gneiss belts: …strip between greenstone-granite belts, the Sand River gneisses that occupy a small area between greenstone-granite belts in Zimbabwe, and the Napier Complex in Enderby Land in Antarctica. Granulite-gneiss belts are commonly surrounded by younger, mostly Proterozoic belts that contain remobilized relicts of the Archean rocks, and the granulites and gneisses…
- Sand River and Bloemfontein conventions (South African history)
Sand River and Bloemfontein conventions, conventions of 1852 and 1854, respectively, between Great Britain and the Voortrekkers (Boers), who after 1835 had invaded the interior of Southern Africa north of the Orange River as part of the Great Trek. The conventions guaranteed their right to govern