to look in to a slice of cork
The cork seemed to be made of thousands of tiny, empty chambers.
it was like amazing to him
a thin slice of cork and microscope
slice off the top of the cork and use a corkscrew to pull out the remainder, however if the cork is crumbling, push the remainder into the bottle and use a strainer to catch the bits. Not elegant but who knows when it is in the glass
True
Robert Hooke named the cell after he looked at a small slice of cork in a microscope
Robert Hooke coined the term cell for biological organisms. While looking at slices of cork through a microscope, he noticed how similar they units making up the cork looked to monks' cells.
Robert Hooke in 1665 found microscopic spots contained within a slice of cork. He called these spots cells.
In 1663, Hooke observed the structure of a thin slice of cork using a compound microscope he had built himself. Cork, the bark of an oak tree, is made up of cells that are no longer alive. To Hooke, the cork looked like tiny rectangular rooms, which he called cells.
Robert Hooke was the first person to discover the cell when he was observing a slice of cork (plant) under the microscope.
One day Robert Hooke went outside is garden and one slice of a cork plant and he placed that slice under his microscope.He found something like a honey comb when he placed it under his microscope.He named it as a cell.