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Jan Ingenhousz

 
Scientist: Jan Ingenhousz

[b. Breda, Holland, December 8, 1730, d. Wiltshire, England, September 7, 1799]

Building on experiments of Joseph Priestley that showed that plants give off oxygen, Ingenhousz laid the groundwork for understanding photosynthesis when he demonstrated that green leaves absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen only in sunlight. In darkness, he showed, leaves -- like animals and nongreen plant parts at all times -- absorb oxygen and give off carbon dioxide. A noted physician, Ingenhousz was among the first to inoculate against smallpox; unlike the safer method later developed by Edward Jenner, however, Ingenhousz used live smallpox viruses.


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Biography: Jan Ingenhousz
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The Dutch physician, chemist, and engineer Jan Ingenhousz (1730-1799) is noted for his demonstration of the process of photosynthesis in plants.

Jan Ingenhousz was born on Dec. 8, 1730, in Breda. He studied medicine at the University of Louvain and graduated in 1752. After spending some years in several European capitals in the typical 18th-century tradition, he settled in London in 1779 and worked with the celebrated naturalist John Hunter.

In that year Ingenhousz published his important book, Experiments upon Vegetables - Discovering Their Great Power of Purifying the Common Air in the Sunshine and of Injuring It in the Shade and at Night. In this work he anticipated by 2 years Joseph Priestley's discovery of the principles of what is now called photosynthesis, that is, the process by which plants exude oxygen and absorb carbon dioxide, thus purifying the air for animals and man.

Unlike Priestley and other chemists who were working on the characteristics of oxygen from the point of view of chemical philosophy, Ingenhousz was preoccupied by the problem of the fundamental balance in the animal and vegetable kingdoms, and this led him to investigate the mutual interdependence of plants and animals. He introduced the concept that the leaves of plants are great laboratories for cleansing and purifying the air. He also noted that oxygen is emitted by the underside of the leaves and that this is a daylight process, whereas in darkness even plants emit small quantities of carbon dioxide instead of absorbing it. In his reflections at the end of the book, Ingenhousz said, "If these conjectures were well grounded, it would throw a great deal of new light upon the arrangement of the different parts of the globe and the harmony between all its parts would become more conspicuous."

The book was soon translated into many languages and became the foundation of that kind of research which in modern times led to a more basic understanding of the process of photosynthesis; however, his search for the concept of economy or balance in nature was not well understood by his contemporaries. As to the nature and origin of the oxygen which the plant emits, a controversy developed in the 1780s between Ingenhousz and Priestley. Ingenhousz thought that water which plants absorb changes into vegetation and that part of this water is then released as oxygen.

Ingenhousz built electrical machines and invented the plate electric machine. He also wrote a two-volume treatise dealing with problems in medicine which are relevant to the physicist and the medical man, and in a sense it could be said that his basic interest was in what is now called biophysics. Ingenhousz also opposed the theory of subtle electrical fluids and repeated some of the experiments on plant electricity to disprove the accepted view that positive electricity was good for the growth of plants and that negative electricity retarded it.

All of Ingenhousz's scientific work was motivated by a deeply religious attitude and the belief that balance in nature is the best expression of the harmony created by its Author. Ingenhousz died in Wiltshire, England, on Sept. 7, 1799.

Further Reading

Howard S. Reed, Jan Ingenhousz: Plant Physiologist, with a History of the Discovery of Photosynthesis (1949), contains a study of Ingenhousz as well as the text of his famous book.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Jan Ingenhousz
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Ingenhousz, Jan (yän ĭng'ənhous), 1730-99, Dutch scientist. He practiced medicine in Holland, England, and Vienna and was noted for his skillful inoculations against smallpox. He demonstrated respiration in plants and recorded his observations in Experiments upon Vegetables (1779).
Wikipedia: Jan Ingenhousz
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Jan Ingenhousz

Jan Ingenhousz
Born December 8, 1730
Breda
Died September 7, 1799
Calne
Residence Breda, London, Vienna, Calne
Nationality Dutch
Fields Physiology
Alma mater Catholic University (Louvain)
Known for Photosynthesis
Influences Pieter van Musschenbroek
David Gaub

Jan Ingenhousz or Ingen-Housz FRS (December 8, 1730 – September 7, 1799) was a Dutch physiologist, biologist and chemist. He is best remembered for showing that light is essential to plant cellular respiration, a vital step in the discovery of photosynthesis. He was a physician to the Austrian Empress Maria Theresa.

In 1779, Ingenhousz discovered that, in the presence of light, plants give off bubbles from their green parts while, in the shade, the bubbles eventually stop.[1] He identified the gas as oxygen. He also discovered that, in the dark, plants give off carbon dioxide. He realized as well that the amount of oxygen given off in the light is more than the amount of carbon dioxide given off in the dark. This demonstrated that some of the mass of plants comes from the air, and not only the soil.

In addition to his work in the Netherlands and Vienna, Igenhousz spent time in France, England, Scotland, and Switzerland, among other places. He carried out research in electricity, heat conduction, and chemistry, and met both Benjamin Franklin and Henry Cavendish.[2] In 1785, he described the irregular movement of coal dust on the surface of alcohol and therefore has a claim as discoverer of what came to be known as Brownian motion. Ingenhousz was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1779.

In 1799, Ingenhousz died in, and was buried at, Calne, England. His wife died the following year.[3]

References

  1. ^ Jan Ingenhousz, Experiments upon Vegetables, Discovering Their great Power of purifying the Common Air in the Sun-shine, and of Injuring it in the Shade and at Night. To Which is Joined, A new Method of examining the accurate Degree of Salubrity of the Atmosphere, London, 1779. From Henry Marshall Leicester and Herbert S. Klickstein, A Source Book in Chemistry 1400-1900, New York, NY: McGraw Hill, 1952. Excerpts Accessed 2008-06-24.
  2. ^ Smith, Edgar F. (1926). "Forgotten Chemists". Journal of Chemical Education 3: 29 – 40. http://www.jce.divched.org/Journal/Issues/1926/Jan/index.html. 
  3. ^ * Van Klooster, H. S. (1952). "Jan Ingenhousz". Journal of Chemical Education 29: 353 – 355. http://www.jce.divched.org/Journal/Issues/1952/Jul/index.html. 

Further reading

  • Beaudreau, Sherry Ann; Finger Stanley (2006). "Medical electricity and madness in the 18th century: the legacies of Benjamin Franklin and Jan Ingenhousz". Perspect. Biol. Med. (United States) 49 (3): 330–45. doi:10.1353/pbm.2006.0036. ISSN 0031-5982. PMID 16960304. 
  • Smit, P. (1980). "Jan Ingen-Housz (1730-1799): some new evidence about his life and work". Janus; revue internationale de l'histoire des sciences, de la médecine, de la pharmacie, et de la technique (Netherlands) 67 (1-2-3): 125–39. ISSN 0021-4264. PMID 11610754. 

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Copyrights:

Scientist. History of Science and Technology, edited by Bryan Bunch and Alexander Hellemans. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Jan Ingenhousz" Read more