Where does a giant tree's wood come from?

A big tree weighs as much as a school bus — yet the hole it grew out of is barely dented. So where did all that wood come from? Let's hunt for it… then run the experiment that gives it away.

1Two invisible deliveries reach a leaf

A leaf breathes in air and sips up water

Two things sneak into every leaf, and you can't see either one. Watch them arrive:

Carbon gas, from the air

The air is full of an invisible gas called CO₂ — carbon dioxide. A leaf breathes it in through tiny holes. The carbon inside it is the secret stuff trees are built from.

Water, from the soil

Roots sip up water and pump it all the way up to the leaves. The water brings the other half a leaf needs to build.

2Two ideas about where wood comes from

Does a tree eat the dirt, or drink the air?

Here are the two guesses people make. They can't both be right — watch how each one says the ground should change:

Idea A

The "eats the dirt" idea

The tree sucks soil up its roots and turns it into wood — so the ground should sink lower as the tree grows.

Idea B

The "drinks the air" idea

The tree builds its body from carbon caught in the air — so the ground should barely change as the tree grows.

3Your turn — feed the leaf

Snap the ingredients into sugar

Inside a leaf, carbon and water get snapped together into sugar — the building block of wood. But it needs light for the energy. Slide all three up and watch the sugar bricks come together.

Inside the leaf carbon + water + light → sugar
NONELOTS
NONEPLENTY
DARKBRIGHT

The leaf is making sugar — wood on the way!

4The big experiment — take one thing away

Weigh the plant and the soil, before and after 🌱

We put a tiny plant on one pan of a scale and its pot of soil on the other. We can take away just the air's carbon — leaving water, light, and soil exactly the same — and let a whole growing season go by. Then we re-weigh both. But first…

Guess before you find out

A tree gains hundreds of pounds of wood. Most of that weight came from…