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afterward withdrawing the cardboard. Move the bottle to the edge of the table and pass the lighted candle up into it (Fig. 5). Does the flame go out as quickly as in the former experiment?

If you breathe through a tube into clear lime water, the water turns milky. The effect of the breath on the candle and on the lime water shows that carbon dioxid is continually leaving our bodies in the breath.

Fig. 4.—Breathing into a bottle.[1 ]

Fig. 5.—Testing the air in the bottle.[1 ]

Oxidation and Deoxidation.—The union of oxygen with carbon and other substances, which occurs in fires and in the bodies of animals, is called oxidation. The separation of the oxygen from carbon such as occurs in the leaves of plants is called deoxidation. The first process sets energy free, the other process stores it up. Animals give off carbon dioxid from their lungs or gills, and plants give off oxygen from their leaves. But plants need some energy in growing, so oxidation also occurs in plants, but to a far less extent than in animals. At night, because of the absence of sunlight, no deoxidation is taking place