13S HOW CROPS GROW. 
when we desire to make statements which may be com 
pared together, because, as has just been remarked, we 
cannot always, nor often, say what sulphates or what 
chlorides are present. 
In the paragraphs that follow, which are devoted te 
a more particular statement of the mode of occurrence, 
redative abundance, special function, and indispensability 
of the fixed ingredients of plants, will be indicated the 
customary and best method of defining them. 
§ 2. 
QUANTITY, DISTRIBUTION, AND VARIATIONS OF THE ASH- 
INGREDIENTS. 
The ash of plants consists of the various fixed acids, 
oxides, and salts, noticed in § 1. 
The ash-ingredients are always present in each cell of 
every plant. 
The ash-ingredients exist partly in the cell-wall, in- 
crusting or imbedded in the cellulose, and partly in the 
plasma or contents of the cell, (see p. 224.) 
One portion of the ash-ingredients is soluble in water, 
and occurs in the juice or sap. This is true, in general, — 
of the salts of the alkalies, and of the sulphates and 
chlorides of magnesium and calcium. Another portion is 
insoluble, and exists in the tissues of the plant in the 
solid form. Silica, the phosphates of lime, and the mag- 
nesia compounds, are mostly insoluble. 
The ash-ingredients may be separated from the volatile 
matter by burning or by any process of oxidation. In 
burning, portions of sulphur, chlorine, alkalies, and phos- 
phorus, may be lost under certain circumstances, by vola 
tilization. The ash remains as a skeleton of the plant, 
and often actually retains and exhibits the microscopic 
form of the tissues. 
The Proportion of Ash is not invariable, even in the 
