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 without free access of air, or smothered, as in a charcoal pit. A mass of charcoal remains, almost as large as the body of the plant. Charcoal is almost pure carbon, the ash present being so small in proportion to the large amount of carbon that we look on the ash as an impurity. Nearly half of the dry substance of a tree is carbon. Carbon goes off as a gas when the plant is burned in air. It does not go off alone, but in combination with oxygen in the form of carbon dioxid gas,.

The green plant secures its carbon from the air. In other words, much of the solid matter of the plant comes from one of the gases of the air. By volume, carbon dioxid forms only a very small fraction of 1 per cent of the air. It would be very disastrous to animal life, however, if this percentage were much increased, for it excludes the life-giving oxygen. Carbon dioxid is often called "foul gas." It may accumulate in old wells, and an experienced person will not descend into such wells until they have been tested with a torch. If the air in the well will not support combustion,—that is, if the torch is extinguished,—it usually means that carbon dioxid has drained into the place. The air of a closed schoolroom often contains far too much of this gas, along with little solid particles of waste matters. Carbon dioxid is often known as carbonic acid gas.

Appropriation of the Carbon.—The carbon dioxid of the air readily diffuses itself into the leaves and other green parts of the plant. The leaf is delicate in texture, and when very young the air can diffuse directly into the tissues. The stomates, however, are the special inlets adapted for the admission of gases into the leaves and other green parts. Through these stomates, or diffusion-pores, the outside air enters into the air-spaces of the plant, and is finally absorbed by the little cells containing the living matter.