Chapter
1 IX | contained hydrogen and oxygen in large proportion, took
2 XV | blasts and saturated with oxygen the glowing plates. The
3 XX | they furnish themselves the oxygen necessary for combustion,
4 XXIII| principally of twenty-one parts of oxygen and seventy-nine of nitrogen.
5 XXIII| nitrogen. The lungs absorb the oxygen, which is indispensable
6 XXIII| a certain time, all the oxygen of the air will be replaced
7 XXIII| to replace the absorbed oxygen; secondly, to destroy the
8 XXIII| chlorure of potassium, and the oxygen which it contains is entirely
9 XXIII| produces seven pounds of oxygen, or 2,400 litres— the quantity
10 III | intended for the production of oxygen, was supplied with chlorate
11 III | not enough to renew the oxygen; they must absorb the carbonic
12 V | in part. We make only the oxygen, my worthy Michel; and with
13 V | apparatus does not furnish the oxygen in too great a quantity;
14 V | troubles. But if we make the oxygen, we do not make the azote,
15 VI | they must have left enough oxygen for three people, if only
16 VII | the potash; and as to the oxygen, Captain Nicholl said “it
17 VIII | he understood all.~“The oxygen!” he exclaimed.~And leaning
18 VIII | hastened to stop the escape of oxygen with which the atmosphere
19 VIII | themselves sober over their oxygen as a drunkard does over
20 VIII | be founded with rooms of oxygen, where people whose system
21 VIII | itself under the regime of oxygen for the sake of its health!”~
22 VIII | exclaimed Michel. “The oxygen has made them revolt.”~“
23 VIII | Barbicane, “you do not want oxygen to mount to the head. You
24 IX | in space, it is true; but oxygen would not fail them, for
25 XV | substances, can provide its own oxygen, and thus throw flames into
26 XV | combustion, is produced in pure oxygen. We must not be in a hurry
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