Problem- Do maggots come from rotting meat?
Hypothesis- If flies don't get in the jar, then there wont be maggots.
First Experiment- One container was left open and the other was left closed (both were filled with rotting meat), only the container that was left open had maggots.
Second Experiment- One container was left open and the other had gauze over the opening (both were filled with rotting meat), only the container without the gauze covering had maggots.
Conclusion- Maggots come from an outside source and not the rotting meat.
Hypothesis- If flies don't get in the jar, then there wont be maggots.
First Experiment- One container was left open and the other was left closed (both were filled with rotting meat), only the container that was left open had maggots.
Second Experiment- One container was left open and the other had gauze over the opening (both were filled with rotting meat), only the container without the gauze covering had maggots.
Conclusion- Maggots come from an outside source and not the rotting meat.
On the first and third row (going from side to side) it shows Redi's first experiment and that in the open jar there were flies and maggots but in the closed jars there were neither. On the first and second row (going from side to side) it shows Redi's second experiment and that in the open jars, flies and maggots had grew inside of it but the jars with the gauze covering had flies and maggots on top of the covering not in the jar.