THE VOYAGE OF ILM.K. CHALLENGE U. 
986 
boiling, attention being paid to securing as steady and regular an ebullition in tlie flask 
as possible. The flask was heated for about two hours, if possible never less than an 
hour and a half, when connection was interrupted between the flask and the gas tube, 
the moment of doing so being chosen so as to leave as little air as possible in the distilled 
water bulb. The gas tube was then sealed off at the lower end. Connection was then 
re-established between the bulb and the flask, and air admitted into the upper part of the 
bulb. The water in the bulb was thus forced back into the flask, and as a rule filled it 
up completely and at once, without leaving a trace of air. Occasionally, however, a 
minute air-bell remained, but it was never larger than a pin’s head. Although Mr. 
Buchanan had no fear that the results would be vitiated by the loss of this minute 
quantity, even supposing it to consist entirely of oxygen and nitrogen, he nevertheless on 
a number of these occasions attached a second gas tube and repeated the boiling. The 
results of the analyses of the contents of these tubes fully bears out the assumption that 
no loss of nitrogen or oxygen could have taken place if the residual air-bell had been 
neglected. The capacity of the gas tubes was from 35 to 40 cubic centimetres, and the 
volume of air extracted from the sample of about 900 c.c. of water varied from 15 to 
20 c.c. when reduced to standard pressure of 760 mm. and temperature of 0° C. 
The amount of carbonic acid in the gas from surface water varied from 1 c.c. to 5 c.c. 
When a second tube was used and the boiling repeated, the reduced volume of the gas 
so extracted was usually under 1 c.c., and was completely absorbed by caustic potash. 
In only one case could it be said that there was any appreciable amount of permanent 
gas. In it the total volume of the gas extracted was 2’89 c.c., and 95 - 4 per cent, 
of it was carbonic acid. These observations prove that the air in the gas tube 
is completely eliminated by the steam from the bulb when its contents are kept in 
constant ebullition for ten to twelve minutes, and that the gas tubes so freed of air and 
having a capacity of not more than 40 c.c., are capable of receiving completely all 
the oxygen and nitrogen contained in 940 c.c. of sea water when boiled by Jacobsen’s 
method. 
The gas tubes were, through the kindness of Dr. Jacobsen, supplied from Germany. 
In order to comply with instructions prohibiting the use of straw in packing the apparatus 
put on board the ship, they were repacked in sawdust, without however having been 
wrapped in paper. The consequence was that particles of sawdust got into the inside 
of the tubes and could in no way be got out except by removing one of the drawn out 
ends of the tube and sweeping them out with a feather. This operation had to be 
performed on every tube that was used, as it was essential that the samples of gas 
collected should be preserved in perfectly clean vessels. Even if the tubes had been 
perfectly clean, the same operation would have had to be performed in order to remedy 
a defect in their construction at the point where they were intended to be sealed up. 
Here they were merely thickened instead of being drawn out. The consequence of 
