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Name ______________________________________________ Date _________________ Block ______ Discovery of Photosynthesis DIRECTIONS. Many scientists contributed to the discovery of photosynthesis. Read the following passage about the discovery of photosynthesis & create a timeline in the chart that follows. The discovery of photosynthesis cannot be attributed to one scientist’s experiments. Rather, several scientists have performed experiments that have led to our current understanding of photosynthesis. The contributions of 5 of these scientists are described below. In 1643, Jan Baptista Van Helmont did the first biological experiment in which all ingredients were measured accurately and all changes noted precisely. From his experiment, Van Helmont concluded that a willow tree drew its nutrients, not from the soil, but from water. He was mistaken in concluding the material that made up the bark, wood, roots and leaves came from the water he had added over the five years. It wouldn’t be until the 1800s that it was correctly understood where the mass of a tree came from. The next important step in the understanding of photosynthesis came in the early 1770’s. Joseph Priestly, the British man recognized for discovering oxygen in 1774, discovered that when he placed a candle in an enclosed jar, the candle would burn out very quickly, much before it ran out of wax. He called the air inside the jar “injured.” He further discovered that a mouse could similarly "injure" air. He then showed that the “injured" could be restored by a plant. One day , Priestly accidentally placed the jar with the candle and plant in a dark corner of his laboratory. The candle’s flame extinguished, but Priestly never explored the role that light played in his observation. In 1778, Dutchman Jan Ingenhousz, court physician to the Austrian Empress, repeated Priestley's experiments (with a few alterations). It had been noticed that submerged plants gave off small bubbles and, if the plants were placed in the shade, these bubbles eventually stopped. Ingenhousz carried out a series of experiments to prove that the bubbles were independent of heat and that the cause of this phenomenon must be light. He further discovered that the accumulated gas re-lit a glowing splint, suggesting that the air was full of oxygen. In the dark, however, he found that the plants gave out less gas, but that the gas extinguished a flame, meaning that the air lacked oxygen. Ingenhousz concluded that in light plants produced oxygen, but in the dark they did not. In 1796, Jean Senebier, a French pastor, showed that the "injured" air was carbon dioxide and that it was taken up by plants during photosynthesis. Senebier demonstrated that light is the agent responsible for the fixation of carbon dioxide and that oxygen is liberated only in the presence of carbon dioxide. In 1804, Saussure repeated Van Helmont’s experiment, but carefully measured the amounts of carbon dioxide and water that were given to the plant. He showed that the carbon in the plants came from carbon dioxide and the hydrogen from water. Saussure showed that the increase in mass of the plant as it grows could not be due only to uptake of water (as van Helmont concluded), but also to the incorporation of carbon dioxide. These 5 scientists, though not the only to contribute to the discovery of photosynthesis, were instrumental in discovering the major reactants and products of photosynthesis. Their conclusions provided the basis for all further photosynthesis studies. Discovery of Photosynthesis TIMELINE Year Scientist (last name) Contribution to Photosynthesis