2. How did Pasteur’s experiment with the flasks help disprove the idea that living things could just appear or come from nonliving things like water and air? 3. Why are nutrients needed for living things? Describe the difference between living and nonliving things.
If you guys could help that would be helpful
Over time, dust particles from the air fell into the broken flasks, but in the intact flasks, dust particles remained near the tip of the swan necks. ... Without the introduction of dust—on which microbes can travel—no life arose. Pasteur thus refuted the notion of spontaneous generation.
thanks
http://bcs.whfreeman.com/webpub/biology/sadavalife9e/animated%20tutorials/life9e_0401_script.html
np :)
Nutrients are chemical substances found in every living thing on Earth. They are necessary to the lives of people, plants, animals, and all other organisms. Nutrients help break down food to give organisms energy. They are used in every process of an organism's body.
and for the differences that's very easy to explain
ye
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