accracted

navigate by keyword : accracted bacteria biology bottle broth containers covered expected experiment fire flask flies fly francesco fresh gauze generation gravy hatched high hypohesis hypothesis john laboratory life maggot maggots meat microorganisms needham open pasteur placed redi redis rotting sealed soon spallanzani spontaneous swarming test was which

Francesco Redi`s experiment. Spontaneous generation Royalty Free Stock Photo
Lazzaro Spallanzani`s experiment. Spontaneous generation Royalty Free Stock Photo
Lazzaro Spallanzani`s experiment. Spontaneous generation Royalty Free Stock Photo
   
   
   
   
Francesco Redi`s experiment. Spontaneous generation
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
To test the hypothesis, Francesco Redi placed fresh meat in open containers: as expected, the rotting meat accracted flies, and the meat was soon swarming with maggots, which hatched into flies. When the jars were covered so that flies could not get in, no maggots were produced. To answer the objection that the cover cut off fresh air necessary for spontaneous generation, Redi covered the jars with porous gauze instead of an air-tight cover. Flies were attracted to the smell of the rotting meat, clustered on the gauze, which was soon swarming with maggots, but the meat itself remained free of maggots. Thus flies are necessary to produse flies: they do not arise spontaneously from rotting meat


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