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LIFE IN MOTION

closely allied to the acid that we find in sour milk, hence called lactic (from lac, milk) acid. Here is evidence then of one chemical change produced by or connected with activity of muscle.

We are all familiar with the fact that living things breathe, and that breathing is the taking in of oxygen and the giving out of carbonic acid gas. When we inhale air in inspiration, the air, which is a mixture of two gases, oxygen and nitrogen, passes into our lungs through passages or tubes that become narrower and narrower, until they end in little sacs or dilatations known as the air-cells of the lungs. On the walls of the air-cells are networks of minute blood-vessels in which the blood flows, and it is here that respiratory exchanges occur between the air and the gases that exist in the blood. Oxygen gas passes into the blood and carbonic acid gas passes out. It is not necessary to demonstrate to you that oxygen gas is necessary for breathing. We all know that this gas must be present in any atmosphere fit for breathing, and that if an animal is placed in an atmosphere containing no oxygen, or if it is placed in a