As far as I remember, don't touch it with your bare hands - use forceps etc and when placing it on the microscope platform handle its edges (as you would a CD). Then study its contents using the microscope at appropriate magnification.
On top of the Microscope slide, the specimen you wish to examine is place and then water and a coverslip is placed on top of that. Other things may be added depending on the speciment you wish to examine such as stainers like Iodine.
Stage is the flat platform where you place your slides. Stage clips hold the slides in place.
Microscopes don't normally come with the slides. Microscopes have a place to insert slides that you have prepared separately. See the instructions for your microscope to locate the place where you would place the slides. You put the slide in to view its called a specimen what you put in it.
On the specimen stage.
Yes, you can.
I dunno, xD that is actually our assignment in Biology class today. xD
I dunno, xD that is actually our assignment in Biology class today. xD
You should be presenting the bulk of the information, not the slides.
One (is not the answer)
With periodic acid during the steps of staining slides.
speed
Fades and Dissolves
Actin
Not the lining themselves. You should lube the caliper and pad slides.
Should be disc brakes and not adjustable caliper slides to compensate for lining wear unless caliper slides are frozen
fall, slides, flow
Dense oceanic crust slides under less dense continental crust