| William B. Johnson - 1803 - 484 pages
...or the water of pulmonary perfpiration, properly called. 2. That which is formed by the combination of the oxygen of the air with the hydrogen of the blood, or the water of refpjration, Thefe chemifts were able to obtain the refpective quan-. titles of thefe... | |
| John Murray - 1809 - 780 pages
...conversion of venous into art trial blood *. There is little reason to suppose, that any combination of the oxygen of the air with the hydrogen of the blood takes place. The supposition that it does, and that this is the source of the watery vapour expired,... | |
| Marie François Xavier Bichat - 1824 - 998 pages
...great part at least, effected through the agency of the exhalant system, and that if the combination of the oxygen of the air with the hydrogen of the blood contributes to produce it during the act of respiration, it is in a small quantity only, and merely... | |
| 1825 - 660 pages
...secretion lining the bronchia; and air vesicles, although Lavoisier imagined that it was generated by the union of the oxygen of the air with the hydrogen given oil' from the blood. Different authors have attempted to estimate the quantity of water thus... | |
| John Ayrton Paris - 1825 - 644 pages
...the secretion lining the bronchia and air vesicles, although Lavoisier imagined that it was generated by the union of the oxygen of the air with the hydrogen given off from the blood. Different authors have attempted to estimate the quantity of water thus produced... | |
| 1840 - 458 pages
...circumstance of material consequence to be attended to. When gas is burned, watery vapour is formed by the union of the oxygen of the air with the hydrogen in the gas. As long as this is kept warm by the products of combustion, it is retained in the aeriform... | |
| Sir Richard Phillips - 1829 - 238 pages
...inches long, killing and swallowing poultry. The tree-frog lives in branches, upon insects. RANCIDITY, the union of the oxygen of the air with the hydrogen of oil, promoted by the solar rays. RAPHAEL D' URBINO, a Roman painter of unrivalled excellence, who died... | |
| 1831 - 488 pages
...and 0.1 cubic inch ; in four trials with 213 cubic inches, the quantity exhaled was 4.1. 3.6, 1-8, and 1.3 cubic inches; and in one trial with 183 cubic...Lavoisierian doctrine of respiration still met with its favourers in France. It may be at the name time true, as our author states, that it is a notion more... | |
| George Crabb - 1831 - 426 pages
...RANCIDITY. The change which oils indergo, both in smell and taste, by exposure to the air, produced by the union of the oxygen of the air with the hydrogen of oil, >romoted by the solar rays. RANGE (in Gunnery.) The line which a shot describes from the mouth... | |
| Robert Hare - 1836 - 624 pages
...glass becomes immediately covered with a dew, arising from the condensation of aqueous vapour, produced by the union of the oxygen of the air with the hydrogen. 181. Laroixicr\t Apparatus for the Recomposition of Water. This apparatus consists of a glass globe,... | |
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