¡Hun: focus of the electric beam and inhale the dirt revealed there. Nor is the disgust abolished by the reflection that, although we do not see the nastiness, we are churning it in our lungs every hour and minute of our lives. There is no respite to... Scientific Opinion - Page 991870Full view - About this book
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1870 - 694 pages
...our lungs every hour and minute of our lives. There is no respite to this contact with dirt; and the wonder is, not that we should from time to time suffer...malaria, which consisted of organic matter in a state of motori/,Yi!v: that when such matter was taken into the body through the lungs or skin, it had the power... | |
| 1870 - 746 pages
...lungs every hour and every minute of our lives. There is no respite to the contact with dirt ; and the wonder is, not that we should from time to time suffer...a portion of it would appear to be deadly to man." That organic matter capable of inducing putrefaction, that living germs of animal or vegetable origin... | |
| 1870 - 746 pages
...lungs every hour and every minute of our lives. There is no respite to the contact with dirt; and the wonder is, not that we should from time to time suffer...a portion of it would appear to be deadly to man." That organic matter capable of inducing putrefaction, that living germs of animal or vegetable origin... | |
| 1870 - 650 pages
...to publish, it is stated that "there is no respite from this contact with dirt, and the wonder ie, not that we should from time to time suffer from its...a portion of it would appear to be deadly to man." It is with reference to this " small portion " that I described the germ theory of diseise. The really... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1870 - 684 pages
...our lungs every hour and minute of our lives. There is no respite to this contact with dirt; and the wonder is, not that we should from time to time suffer from its presence, bat that so small a portion of it would appear to be deadly to man. And what is this portion ? It was... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1872 - 610 pages
...our lungs every hour and minute of our lives. There is no respite to this contact with dirt; and the wonder is, not that we should from time to time suffer...a portion of it would appear to be deadly to man. Schwann, of Berlin, discovered the yeast plant independently; and in February, 1837, he also announced... | |
| Royal institution of Great Britain - 1872 - 628 pages
...minute of our lives. There is no respite to this contact with dirt; and the wonder is, not that wo should from time to time suffer from its presence,...a portion of it would appear to be deadly to man. Oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, carbonic acid, so prepared as to exclude all floating particles, produce... | |
| 1874 - 452 pages
...our lungs every hour and minute of our lives. There is no respite to this contact with dirt ; and the wonder is, not that we should from time to time suffer...a portion of it would appear to be deadly to man." Watts states that a minute quantity of organic matter, one grain in 200,000, is found in the present... | |
| John Eric Erichsen - 1874 - 124 pages
...our lungs every hour and minute of our lives. There is no respite to this contact with dirt ; and the wonder is, not that we should from time to time suffer...a portion of it would appear to be deadly to man.' Watts states that a minute quantity of organic matter — one grain in 200,000 — is found in the... | |
| 1874 - 640 pages
...our lungs every hour and minute of our lives. There is no respite to this con tact with dirt, and the wonder is, not that we should from time to time suffer...a portion of it would appear to be deadly to man." Watts states that a minute quantity of organic matter, one grain in 200,000, is found in the present... | |
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