Robert Hooke
Anton Van Leuwenhoek
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.
Robert Hook. He didn't actually see the cells as we know of it today, but identified the magnification of cork as "cell", because it looked like prison blocks.
He gave cells the name cells because he looked at a cork underneath a microscope and he thought it looked like the Monk's cells.
cell walls
Robert Hook
Robert Hooke named the spaces in the cork cell
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.
Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke
When Robert Hooke examined a thin cutting of a cork he saw empty spaces enclosed by walls. He called these empty spaces cells.
Robert Hook
Robert Hooke. He looked through his microscope and thought the cork looked like little jail cells or rooms, so he called them "CELLS". This took place in 1665.
Hooke discovered cells when he examined cork under his homemade microscope.
Robert Hooke was the first man to look at cells through his very simple microscope. He observed dead cork cells and described them as cells in a monastary. He called the tiny empty chambers in the cork, cells.
Robert Hooke
In 1665, a man named Robert Hooke observed "cell-like compartments" while looking at a slide of cork. He called them "cells" due to the resemblence to monks' cells.
these something u would have to look up for yourself He thought the spaces looked like monks' rooms in a monastery, so he called them "cells".