When Robert Hooke examined a thin cutting of a cork he saw empty spaces enclosed by walls. He called these empty spaces cells.
Hahaha idont realy know it thats why im asking, do you know it?
Robert Hook was observing sections of cork resembling the structure of cells with those of honey bee hive cells.
Hook saw the individual cells of the cork
He was observing cork slices under the microscope.
Robert Hooke named the cell after he looked at a small slice of cork in a microscope
It helped us to see a cell that we cannot see with our naked eyes.
nobody knows i looked for years i loked for mevdince but coldn't fuine
Robert Hooke first looked at cork cells. Hooke, who lived during the 1600's invented the compound microscope and coined the term 'cell'.
He was observing cork slices under the microscope.
While Robert Hooke was observing cells through the microscope, he thought the cells looked like prison cells, and that's where the idea came from.
Hooke found the cell when looking underneath a microscope at his home where he saw dead cells of a piece of cork. He named these cells because they looked like tiny rooms meaning cells.
Robert Hooke looked at a cork under a microscope, not plant cells!
He first looked through a microscope in 1665
Robert Hooke. He looked at a cork.
he looked over yeast
Robert Hooke named the cell after he looked at a small slice of cork in a microscope
It helped us to see a cell that we cannot see with our naked eyes.
robert hooke he looked at a cork and said that it looked like a cell
robert hooke
Robert Hooke was looking down a microscope at a piece of cork.What he saw were the non-living cell walls that are characteristic of phellum (cork) when mature.