Scientific American Supplement, No. 470, January 3, 1885 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 470, January 3, 1885.

Scientific American Supplement, No. 470, January 3, 1885 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 470, January 3, 1885.
The field presented to the eye is depicted in Fig. 1, B, where it is visible that while the original organism persists yet a new organism has arisen in and invaded the fluid.  It is a relatively long and beautiful spiral form, and now the movement in the field is entrancing.  The original organism darts with its vigor and grace, and rebounds in all directions.  But the spiral forms revolving on their axes glide like a flight of swallows over the ample area of their little sea.  Ten hours more elapsed and, without change of circumstances, another drop was taken from the now palpably putrescent fluid.  The result of examination is given in Fig. 1, C, where it will be seen that the first organism is still abundant, the spiral organism is still present and active, but a new and oval form, not a bacterium, but a monad, has appeared.  And now the intensity of action and beauty of movement throughout the field utterly defy description, gyrating, darting, spinning, wheeling, rebounding, with the swiftness of the grayling and the beauty of the bird.  Finally, at the end of another eight to sixteen hours, a final “dip” was taken from the fluid, and under the same lens it presented as a field what is seen in Fig. 1, D, where the largest of the putrefactive organisms has appeared and has even more intense and more varied movements than the others.  Now the question before us is, “How did these organisms arise?” The water was pure; they were not discoverable in the fresh muscle of fish.  Yet in a dozen hours the vessel of water is peopled with hosts of individual forms which no mathematics could number!  How did they arise?  From universally diffused eggs, or from the direct physical change of dead matter into living forms?  Twelve years ago the life-histories of these forms were unknown.  We did not know biologically how they developed.  And yet with this great deficiency it was considered by some that their mode of origin could be determined by heat experiments on the adult forms.  Roughly, the method was this:  It was assumed that nothing vital could resist the boiling point of water.  Fluids, then, containing full-grown organisms in enormous multitudes, chiefly bacteria, were placed in flasks, and boiled for from five to ten minutes.  While they were boiling the necks of the flasks was hermetically closed; and the flask was allowed to remain unopened for various periods.  The reasoning was:  “Boiling has killed all forms of vitality in the flask; by the hermetical sealing nothing living can gain subsequent access to the fluid; therefore, if living organisms do appear when the flask is opened, they must have arisen in the dead matter de novo by spontaneous generation, but if they do never so arise, the probability is that they originate in spores or eggs.”

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 470, January 3, 1885 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.