• Skip to Content
  • Home
  • Previous Page: Why Do We Breathe? Cellular Respiration
  • Next Page: What Is Organic Chemistry?
  • Up: Science and Nature
  • Access Options
  • Site Index
  • Print this page
  • Share Page
  • Mobile

LesTout Logo
  • Connect with experts
  • Read the latest articles and news
  • Become an expert and share practical advice
LesTout is an online network of helpful guides, eager to share their Expert Advice with you! Learn more or Join LesTout Community - It's Free!

Spontaneous Generation of Life

Picture of: Tami Port, MS
From : TamiPort
Your guide for : Science and Nature
Published in : Science and Nature
Login or  Sign Up Now to participate in our community and subscribe to our Newsletters.
  • Posted on 10-23-2008
  • Views 156
  • Rating 0 (0 votes)
Print this page


Although today we understand that living things can only be produced by other living things, the idea of spontaneous generation was entrenched in the minds of man throughout most of history.

Aristotle and Abiogenesis
Aristotle was one of the first to record his conclusions on the possible routes to life. He saw beings as arising in one of three ways, from sexual reproduction, asexual reproduction or nonliving matter.

According to Aristotle, it was readily observable that aphids arise from the dew on plants, fleas from putrid matter, and mice from dirty hay; and this belief remained unchallenged for more than two thousand years.

Francesco Redi’s Experiments
(late 1600s)
Redi was and Italian physician and one of the first to formally challenge the doctrine of spontaneous generation. Redi's question was simple, “Where do maggots come from?”

According to abiogenesis, one would conclude that maggots came from rotting food. Redi hypothesized that maggots came from flies and designed an experiment, elegant in its simplicity, to challenge spontaneous generation.

Redi put meat into three separate jars:

  • Jar #1 he left open. He observed flies laying eggs on the meat and the eventual development of maggots.
  • Jar #2 he covered with netting. Flies laid their eggs on the netting and maggots soon appeared.
  • Jar #3 he sealed. Flies were not attracted to this jar and no maggots developed on the meat.


This seems to be a clear demonstration of life giving rise to life. Yet it took another two hundred years for people to accept abiogenesis as a fallacy.

Anthony van Leeuwenhoek’s “Animalcules” (1600-1700s)
Leeuwenhoek was a Dutch cloth merchant, and due to his trade, frequently used lenses to examine cloth. Rather than employing lenses made by others, he ground his own, and the expertise that he gained through lens crafting combined with a curious mind eventually led to an interest in microscopy.

During his life, Leeuwenhoek assembled more than 250 microscopes, some of which magnified objects 270 times. Through magnification, he discovered presence of “micro” organisms--organisms so tiny that they were invisible to the naked eye.

He called these tiny living things “animalcules,” and was the first to describe many microbes and microscopic structures, including bacteria, protozoans and human cells.

John Needham & Lazzaro Spallanzani (1700s)
The debate over spontaneous generation was reignited with Leeuwenhoek’s discovery of animalcules and the observation that these tiny organisms would appear in collected rainwater within a matter of days. John Needham and Lazzaro Spallazani both set out to examine this apparent microscopic abiogenesis.

Needham’s Experiment
John Needham was a proponent of spontaneous generation, and his beliefs were confirmed when, after boiling beef broth to kill all microbes, within the span of a few days, cloudiness of the broth indicated the respawning of microscopic life.

Spallazani’s Experiment
Lazzaro Spallazani noted a flaw in Needham’s experiment. The containers holding Needham’s beef broths had not been sealed upon boiling. So Spallazani modified Needham’s experiment, boiling infusions, but immediately upon boiling he melted the necks of his glass containers so that they were not open to the atmosphere. The microbes were killed and did not reappear unless he broke the seal and again exposed the infusion to air.

Louis Pasteur Settles It (1800s)
Pasteur, a French scientist who made great contributions to our understanding of microbiology and for whom the process of “pasteurization” is named, repeated experiments similar to those of Spallazani’s and brought to light strong evidence that microbes arise from other microbes, not spontaneously.

Pasteur’s Swan-Necked Flasks
Pasteur created unique glass flasks with unusual long, thin necks that pointed downward. These “swan-necked” flasks allowed air into the container but did not allow particles from the air to drift down into the body of the flask.

The End of Abiogenesis

After boiling his nutrient broths, Pasteur found that these swan-necked containers would remain free of microbes until he either broke the necks of the flasks, allowing particles from the air to drift in, or until he tilted the flask so that the liquid came in contact with dust that had accumulated at the opening of the flask. It was these carefully controlled experiments of Pasteur that finally put to rest the debate over spontaneous generation.

More Resources on Microbiology
For more information on spontaneous generation and microbiology in genera;, see the following web sites:
Virtual Microbiology Classroom
The Slow Death of Spontaneous Generation (1668-1859)
Definition of Spontaneous Generation from Biology Online

Sources
Bauman, R. (2005) Microbiology.
Park Talaro, K. (2008) Foundations in Microbiology.

* This article was originally published in Suite101 online magazine.

All fields mark * are required.

Click here to post new commentsLeave a Comment

Click here to close rateRate this  Article

Click here to open feedback formContact this Member

Click here to open tell a friend formTell a Friend

Click here for link of this pageLink to this Article

News and Society

Article Archive

view article archive


Featured Articles  RSS

Not available yet

Already have a Lestout account? Login here.

Free Newsletters

Subscribe now for the Lestout Newsletter!