ology, physical geography, and lastly of minerals, plants,
animals and men. In accordance with his chief object,
general instruction, it is written in German and in a good
homely style, and contains the best information that was at that
time to be obtained on scientific subjects ; among these he
gives an account of the processes of nutrition in plants, in which
he made careful and intelligent use of all that had been written
on the subject, bringing together all the serviceable material
which he could gather from Malpighi, Grew, Leeuwenhoek,
Van Helmont, Mariotte and others into a connected system,
and occasionally introducing pertinent critical remarks. If we
consider the state of scientific literature in Germany in the
first years of the 18th century, we shall be inclined to assign
as great merit to comprehensive text-books of this popular
character as to new investigations and minor discoveries.
Wolff's chapter on nutrition has however a special interest for
us, because it contains several observations of value which
were lost sight of after his time. These refer chiefly to the
chemistry of nutrition and touch many problems which were
not solved before our time ; for instance, the statement that it
is a well-known fact that the earth loses its fruitfulness, if
much is grown on it; that it requires much to feed it, and
must be manured with dung or ashes ; in these few words we
have the questions of the exhaustion of the soil, and the restitution of the substances taken from it by the crop, brought
into notice by Wolff at this early period. ’It should be
particularly noted,' continues Wolff, 'how fruitful nitre makes the soil; Vallemont has praised the usefulness of nitre, and
has mentioned other things which have a like operation by
reason of their saline and oily particles, such as horn from the
horns and hoofs of animals; dung likewise contains saline and
oily particles, which are present in the ash also, and we see
therefore that such particles should not be wanting, if a plant is
to be fed from water. The seed also, which supplies the first food of the plant, shows the same thing, for there are none which do
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Theory of the Nutrition
[BOOK III.