30 HOW CROPS GROW. 



Organic matters are in general characterized by com 

 plexity of constitution, and are exceedingly numerous and 

 various; while inorganic bodies are of simpler composi 

 tion, and comparatively few in number. 



VOLATILE AND FIXED MATTER. All plants and animals, 

 taken as a whole, and all of their organs, consist of a vola- 

 ti.e and a fixed part, which may be separated by burning ; 

 the former usually by far the larger share passing into, 

 and mingling with the air as invisible gases ; the latter 

 forming, in general, but from one to five per cent of the 

 whole remaining as ashes. 



EXPERIMENT 1. A splinter of wood heated in the flame of a lamp 

 takes fire, burns, and yields volatile matter, which consumes with flame, 

 and ashes, which are the only visible residue of the combustion. 



Many organic bodies, products of life, but not essential 

 vital organs, as sugar, citric acid, etc., are completely 

 volatile when in a state of purity, and leave no ash. 



CURRENT USE OF THE TERMS ORGANIC AND INORGAN 

 IC. It is usual among agricultural writers to confine the 

 term organic to the volatile or destructible portion of vege 

 table and animal bodies, and to designate their ash-ingre 

 dients as inorganic matter. This use of the words is ex 

 tremely inaccurate. What is found in the ashes of a tree 

 or of a seed, in so far as it was an essential part of the or 

 ganism, was as truly organic as the volatile portion, and by 

 submitting organic bodies to fire, they may be entirely 

 converted into inorganic matter, the volatile as well as the 

 fixed parts. 



ULTIMATE ELEMENTS THAT CONSTITUTE THE PLANT. 

 Chemistry has demonstated th:it the volatile and destruct 

 ible part of organic bodies is made up chiefly of four sub 

 stances, viz. : carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen, 

 and contains two other elements in lesser quantity, viz. : 

 sulphur and phosphorus. In the ash we may find phos 

 phorus, sulphur, silicon, chlorine, potassium, sodium, cal 



