Microbiologist
a cytologist
cytology
It Was van Leeuwenhoek By: Semaj Lisenby
Because eden is awsome
the invention of the simple microscope by Robert hooke facilitated the initial study of cells.later the invention of the complex microscope and more recently the electronic microscope helped the scientists to learn so much about the microscopic cells.
what do we call scientists who study plant
The microscope enabled scientists to magnify their observations, allowing research and the study of cells, bacteria, animals, etc.
A cell biologist-
It Was van Leeuwenhoek By: Semaj Lisenby
a cytologist cyto- cell
Because eden is awsome
Because cells are way to small to see without a microscope.
Cell biologists or sometimes cytologists.
Regenerative Medicine
Albert Einstein did not study cells. He was a physicist. Anton von Leeuwenhoek developed microscopes and studied cells. Robert Hooke was the first scientists to refer to cells in cork tissues. Robert Brown is credited with discovering the cell nucleus.
why do you think scientists study earths interior?if you were a scientists ,will you undertake a study of the earths interior?
Scientists do not study family trees. Geneticists are scientists who study genetics and inheritance. Genealogists study family trees, but they are not scientists.
Scientists who study the structure and function of cells are called microbiologists because the cells are very tiny and cannot be seen with the naked eye, but with a microscope. Microbiology describes the study of microscopic organisms - microorganisms - and their effects. A microorganism is a life-form too small to be observed with the naked eye - without using a microscope. The word 'microbiologist' is formed from 'micro' (very small) and 'logy' (the study or science or theory of something).
the invention of the simple microscope by Robert hooke facilitated the initial study of cells.later the invention of the complex microscope and more recently the electronic microscope helped the scientists to learn so much about the microscopic cells.