Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke did
Leeuwenhoek
Leeuwenhoek
Robert Hook
Hooke
robert koch
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When Hooke looked at the cork cells through his microscope, he noticed that they looked like individual little chambers, and another word for chambers is cells, so that's why he called them cells.
Robert Hooke looked at cork with a microscope. He noticed little boxes that he called "rooms" or "cells". Monks and other religious people lived in small cells or rooms.
I'm sorry i can't remember his name i think it was Thomas Hooke but I'm not sure. He (or whoever it is) looked at cork and saw the small little boxes. He thought it looked like jail cells so he called them cells.
the cell was "invented" cause when he looked through the microscope, he called the tiny boxes cells.
Robert Hooke called cells "little boxes" in the 1600's
They are called CELLS .
The boxes are cells and together they form a row.
The cell was discovered by Robert Hooke who had been looking at cork under a microscope. He noticed little "boxes" which he called cells. Infact, the "cells" were part of the membrane of cork cells. It wasn't until the 1830s that cytoplasm was discovered. Before this cell organelles were thought to float around in the cell. Cytoplasm is the "jelly-like" substance that contains all membrane bound organelles. I do not remember the year Robert Hooke discovered cells.
Cells
Robert Hooke.
He called them "jail cells". He also called them "animacules".
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Robert hooke -Was the first person to discover cells, while observing cork he Noticed that he Saw a great many boxes, He called these tiny boxes cells.
When Hooke looked at the cork cells through his microscope, he noticed that they looked like individual little chambers, and another word for chambers is cells, so that's why he called them cells.
Robert Hooke looked at cork with a microscope. He noticed little boxes that he called "rooms" or "cells". Monks and other religious people lived in small cells or rooms.
Robert Hooke discovered the cell in the mid 1600's by looking at a piece of cork in a microscope and noticed it was made up of boxes that looked like prison cells, which is where the name comes from.Alexander Fleming