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cannot be considered adequate yet, nor can we be said dafin-
itely to have found the poison of malaria. at present, the
sum of our knowledge seems to be this: that malaria is an
earth- born poison; that it appears to proceed from those
elements which exist in soil, though the precise nature of
the poison ia still undetermined.
In India rivers and streams, almost from their sources tɔ
their mouths, are some of the chief nannts of malaria, and
prime factors in its production. Inundating vast tracts of
country during the rains, as they recede vast lagoons are left,
and as these slowly evaporate, auring a period of five months,
malarial disease becomes very rife, the unhealthy time is not
during the rains, but when the inundated lande begin to dry.
Salt water lagoone, formed near the mouths of large rivers,
are also fertile sources of malaria.
It is an axiom with us in the East that any low-lying land,
with a quickly growing, luxuriant vegetation and a supersbun-
dance of insect life, is almost certain to be pestilential.
Clearance of soil, cultivation of forests do not necessarily
remove the evils which produce malaria. It has, indeed, often
happened that the outbrakes of disease have been greatly inten-
sified by such clearances, the danger of turning up the soil
and exposing it to sun and showers has often been exemplified.
There was a great outbreak of malarial disease in Paris when
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