In the 1770s, Ingenhousz first became interested in the gaseous exchanges of plants after meeting the scientist
Joseph Priestley (1733–1804) at his house in
Birstall,
West Yorkshire, on 23 May 1771. Although Priestley previously observed that plants make and absorb gases, he had failed to comprehend the critical role of sunlight, and his inconclusive experiments yielded inconsistent results. Ingenhousz's travelling party in northern England included
Benjamin Franklin. They then stayed at the rectory in
Thornhill, West Yorkshire with the polymath and botanist Rev.
John Michell. In 1779, Ingenhousz conducted months-long exhaustive and methodical experimentation at a rented country house in Southall Green, He identified the gas bubbles he observed as
oxygen. And, in his own words, with regard to plants in air chambers (taken from the 300-plus page book he wrote summarizing his findings), “All plants possess a power of correcting, in a few hours, foul air unfit for respiration; but only in clear day light, or in the sun shine.” He also discovered that in the dark, plants give off
carbon dioxide. He realised 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 realization thus implied that some of the mass of plants comes from the air—not only from water and nutrients in the
soil—an observation he continued to explore in future work. == Other work ==