Anton von Leeuwenhoek
Because the boxlike cells of cork reminded him of the cells in which live at a monastery. From my biology book-chapter7 section 1.
Robert Hooke named the spaces in the cork cell
The golgi apparatus mitochondria ribosomes are present in the onion cells which is absent in the cork cell. Both contain cell wall and have cells in rectangular shape.
When Robert Hooke examined a thin cutting of a cork he saw empty spaces enclosed by walls. He called these empty spaces cells.
A cork cell appears empty under a microscope because it lacks a nucleus and other organelles. The cell is composed mainly of a rigid material called suberin, which provides structural support and durability to the plant. This lack of internal organelles gives the cell a hollow appearance when viewed under a microscope.
Because the boxlike cells of cork reminded him of the cells in which live at a monastery. From my biology book-chapter7 section 1.
Robert Hooke called them 'cells' because they reminded him of the small rooms of monks (cells).
Robert Hooke called them 'cells' because they reminded him of the small rooms of monks (cells).
cell walls
Robert hooke discovered something new under his microscope by using cork He called what he saw "box like" structures. These were cells.
Robert Hooke in 1665 Robert Hooke an English scientist cut a thin slice of cork and looked at it under his microscope. to Hooke the cork seemed to be a bunch of tiny boxes which he called "cells"
A cork cell is a non living cell. These cells form a protective tissue that displaces the stem epidermis as the plant's diameter increases in size. These cells are produce from the living cork cambium. As the cork cambium cells divide, the push older cells towards the outside of the plant where they die and form cork and bark. Will it can The cells of the phellem are called cork cells, they are generated centrifugally, are non-living and have suberized cell walls. The phelloderm consists of cells given off towards the inside of the phellogen, forming the inner part of the periderm.
Robert Hooke noticed, while using a microscope, that he could see "cells" in cork. These were like the little rooms that monks slept in and were called cells.
Cork comes from trees which are eukaryotic
He called them "jail cells". He also called them "animacules".
Yes. Robert Hooke saw cells in cork when he observed it under the microscope. What he actually observed was the cell walls of dead cork cells. He called them cells because they reminded him of the rooms (cells) of monks in a monastery.
he described the cork cells to be tiny cells