antoine van leluwenhoek
aristotlr
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, Marcello Malpighi, and Robert Hooke were three biologists who significantly advanced the field of biology by using microscopes in their work to observe and study biological specimens at a cellular level.
There are a number of different biologist jobs in the botany field in the United States. However on specific jobs it depends what city and state you live in. To view all biologist jobs in the botany field look at http://www.biologyjobs.com/search_result.cfm?requesttimeout=500.
Linnaeus had more jobs as a botany,biologist,scientist,and physician. Linnaeus had more jobs as a botany,biologist,scientist,and physician.
Robert Hooke made significant contributions to botany through his work on plant anatomy, specifically his use of a microscope to observe plant cells. Hooke's detailed studies of plant structure, including his discovery of plant cells, laid the foundation for modern botany and our understanding of plant biology.
Botany cannot contribute to chemistry; the relation is vice versa.
a biologist specializing in the study of plants
He was unable to see through a microscope. (Discussed in "My Life and Hard Times")
William Woolls has written: 'A contribution to the flora of Australia' -- subject(s): Botany
Robert Brown (21 December 1773 - 10 June 1858) was a Scottish botanist and palaeobotanist who made important contributions to botany largely through his pioneering use of the microscope.
George N. Lloyd has written: 'Botanical terminology, or dictionary explaining the terms most generally employed in systematic botany' -- subject(s): Botany, Dictionaries
A biologist specializes in on sub branch of biology to be an expert in it, and not go on learning other sub branches because the others can be like the exact opposite of what he learned. e.g archnology and botany.
Biologist Biologist is a generalized answer. Biology covers a broad spectrum of career paths. More specific answers could be "botany" or "Ichthyology" which are branches of biology but more specifically geared to the search for and study of Plants and Fish, respectively.