The London Quarterly Review, Volym 69–70Theodore Foster, 1842 |
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Sida 177
... oxygen , and nitrogen ; very often of the first three alone ; while the remain- der is composed of certain saline , earthy , and metallic compounds , which form the ashes that remain when vegetables are burned . The former are called ...
... oxygen , and nitrogen ; very often of the first three alone ; while the remain- der is composed of certain saline , earthy , and metallic compounds , which form the ashes that remain when vegetables are burned . The former are called ...
Sida 178
... oxygen withdrawn at every moment from the atmosphere by the respiration of men and animals , as well as by the processes of combustion and pu- trefaction ; the whole of which oxygen is converted into an equal volume of carbon- ' It must ...
... oxygen withdrawn at every moment from the atmosphere by the respiration of men and animals , as well as by the processes of combustion and pu- trefaction ; the whole of which oxygen is converted into an equal volume of carbon- ' It must ...
Sida 179
... oxygen in the whole mass ( of vegetables ) is less than in carbonic sources of oxygen gas are the tropics and warm " The proper , constant , and inexhaustible acid . It is therefore certain that plants must climates , where a sky seldom ...
... oxygen in the whole mass ( of vegetables ) is less than in carbonic sources of oxygen gas are the tropics and warm " The proper , constant , and inexhaustible acid . It is therefore certain that plants must climates , where a sky seldom ...
Sida 181
... oxygen and hydrogen : - " Carbonic acid , water , and ammonia contain the ( organic ) elements necessary for the support of animals and vegetables . The same substan- ces are the ultimate products of the chemical processes of decay and ...
... oxygen and hydrogen : - " Carbonic acid , water , and ammonia contain the ( organic ) elements necessary for the support of animals and vegetables . The same substan- ces are the ultimate products of the chemical processes of decay and ...
Sida iii
... oxygen and car- bonic acid of the atmosphere preserve a fixed rela- tion to each other , 178 , 179 ; connection of the life of plants with that of animals , 179 ; sources of oxygen , ib .; reasons why the doctrine that the carbonic acid ...
... oxygen and car- bonic acid of the atmosphere preserve a fixed rela- tion to each other , 178 , 179 ; connection of the life of plants with that of animals , 179 ; sources of oxygen , ib .; reasons why the doctrine that the carbonic acid ...
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