330 HOW CROPS GROW. 



The Soil, on the other hand, is very variable in compo 

 sition and quality, and may be enriched and improved, or 

 deteriorated and exhausted. 



From the Atmosphere the crop can derive no appreci 

 able quantity of those elements that are found in its Ash. 



In the Soil, however, from the waste of both plants and 

 animals, may accumulate large supplies of all the elements 

 of the Volatile part of Plants. Carbon, certainly in the 

 form of carbonic acid, probably or possibly in the condi 

 tion of Humus (Vegetable Mould, Muck), may thus be 

 put, as food, at the disposition of the plant. Nitrogen \t 

 chiefly furnished to crops by the soil. Nitrates are formed 

 in the latter from various sources, and ammonia-salts, to 

 gether with certain proximate animal principles, viz., 

 urea, guanin, tyrosin, uric acid and hippuric acid, likewise 

 serve to supply nitrogen to vegetation and are ingredients 

 of the best manures. It is, too, from the soil that the 

 crop gathers all the Water it requires, which not cnly 

 serves as the fluid medium of its chemical and structural 

 metamorphoses, but likewise must be regarded as the ma 

 terial from which it mostly appropriates the Hydrogen 

 and Oxygen of its solid components. 



2- 



THE JUICES OF THE PLANT, THEIR NATURE AND 

 MOVEMENTS. 



Very erroneous notions are entertained with regard to 

 the nature and motion of sap. It is commonly taught that 

 there are two regular and opposite currents of sap circu 

 lating in the plant. It is stated that the &quot; crude sap &quot; ia 

 taken up from the soil by the roots, ascends through the 



