Robert Hooke first looked at cork cells. Hooke, who lived during the 1600's invented the compound microscope and coined the term 'cell'.
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.
Though Newton claimed to be self-taught, it is predicted that he was taught by Robert Hooke. It is also thought that after Hooke's death, Newton stole some of his ideas and claimed them as his own. After Hooke's death, a great number of his published works went missing from a library very few had access to and Newton was one of those selected individuals.
It was located in modern day Italy..... Fun fact, naples is located right next to the still active volcano that took out pompeii, and the ground has risen 10 feet since the 70's.
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1966 was awarded to Robert S. Mulliken for his fundamental work concerning chemical bonds and the electronic structure of molecules by the molecular orbital method.
Robert Hooke first looked at cork cells. Hooke, who lived during the 1600's invented the compound microscope and coined the term 'cell'.
well Robert Hooke was viewing cork whick are made of bark. Bark is dead empty plant cells s
Robert Hooke called cells "little boxes" in the 1600's
Robert Hooke observed a pice of cork in the early1600's Robert Hooke observed a pieceof cork in the early1600's that had would he discribed to be little things crawling on it. Later he came up with a name cells there you go
The middle 1600's with a microscope and some cork
S. H. Hooke was born in 1874.
S. H. Hooke died in 1968.
In the 1660's robert hooke looked through a primitive microscope at a thinly cut piece of pork
Robert Hooke was a British Surveyor and assistant to Christopher Wren who was charged with the rebuilding of London following the Great Fire of 1666. He also worked on Londonâ??s monument to the fire. Both he and Wren were astronomers and the monument served as a telescope for observing transits as well.
It has two 2's
S A. Knox-Hooke has written: 'Law relating to public libraries in West Africa'
S. H. Hooke has written: 'The seige perilous' 'New Year's Day' 'Middle Eastern mythology'