printing a definite quantity of carbon make a much more than
proportionate addition to their dry substance, and that this is
due to the simultaneous fixation of the component parts of
water. The full significance of this fact could only be apprehended at a later time, when the theory of the combinations of
carbon, organic chemistry, had been further developed. As
regards the importance of the decomposition of carbon dioxide
by the green organs under the influence of light to the whole
nourishment of the plant, de Saussure arrived by more definite
proofs than Ingen-Houss had given at the result, that only
a small portion of the substance of plants is derived from the
constituents of the soil in solution in water, but that the great
mass of the vegetable body is built up from the carbon dioxide
of the atmosphere and the constituents of water; he convinced himself of this partly by considering the small quantities
of matter which the water is able to dissolve from a soil capable
of sustaining vegetation, partly by experiments in vegetation
and considerations of a more general character.
Not less important were de Saussure's investigations into oxygen-respiration by plants, which taken simply as a fact, had been previously discovered by Ingen-Houss. But de Saussure showed that growth is impossible without this process of respiration, even in germinating plants, though these are rich in assimilated matter. He further showed that green leaves and opening flowers, and generally the parts of plants which are distinguished by greater activity of vital processes, require more oxygen for respiration than those in a less active and resting state. He determined the loss of weight which the organic substance of germinating plants suffers from respiration, and found it to be greater than was proportionate to the weight of carbon exhaled; but the chemical science of his day did not supply him with a certain explanation of this fact. Lastly, de Saussure at a later time (1822) discovered the chief relations between the internal heat of flowers and their consumption of oxygen, and thus we see that he supplied the most important