A man named Antonie van Leeuwenhoek at the turn of the 1700's.
He saw that all living things have cells.
Likely the chinese.
who was the first person to observe living cells in a drop of pond water.
no. It was actually technically the vikings that came first.
it was the English scientist Robert hooke
In 1600
Who- YA MAM When- WHEN YA GET A WASH
Robert Hooke did not discover blood cells. He was the first person to see cells. He saw cells of the oak plant in cork. He viewed a tiny slice of cork under his microscope and saw small compartments which he called cells.
Robert Hooke was the first person to see cells. He saw them with a compound-microscope.
, I can awnser your question. Well mr.hooke could have call what he first saw hookes but instead he called them cells
aristole was the first person to view the cell [he was greek]
Antonie Philips van Leeuwenhoek saw them first while using his primitive homemade microscopes.
Robert Hooke first looked at cork cells. Hooke, who lived during the 1600's invented the compound microscope and coined the term 'cell'.
Anton van Leeuwenhoek did not call anything he saw in his microscope cells, Robert Hooke did when he saw some plant material in his microscope for the first time. He said they reminded him of monk's living quarters.
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.
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.
Robert hooke -Was the first person to discover cells, while observing cork he Noticed that he Saw a great many boxes, He called these tiny boxes cells.