aristole was the first person to view the cell [he was greek]
Robert Hooke was born in England in 1635. He was the first scientist to observe and identify cells. He first saw them on a slide of cork.
Robert Hook observed cells first in 1665.He observed cork cells.
hooke
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.
Robert Hooke was the first person to discover the cell when he was observing a slice of cork (plant) under the microscope.
Usually cells are not flat, they come in a range of structures. However when observing under a optical microscope slide, they are flattened for better view.
Robert Hooke was looking down a microscope at a piece of cork.What he saw were the non-living cell walls that are characteristic of phellum (cork) when mature.
After observing a thin slice of cork, Robert Hooke reported to the world that life's smallest structural units were "little boxes". Hooke was able to see individual cells. NOW, Anton van Leeuwnhoek was probably the first actually to observe live microorganisms.
Clyde Tombaugh
Robert Hooke named cells after observing cork cell walls in 1665.
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.
Robert Hooke was the first person to discover cells, but what he was observing was a dead plant cell. The first person who observed living cells was Leeuwenhoek.
Robert Hooke is attributed with observing the first cells in the 17th century. He named them cells because they reminded him of the rooms that monks lived in inside a monastery, which were called cells.
microscope.
Robert Hooke was the first person to discover the cell when he was observing a slice of cork (plant) under the microscope.
Robert Hooke in the year 1665 while he was observing cork cells (bark of the tree).
Robert Brown
Thin slices of cork
hooke
Some unknown prehistoric person observing a fire ignited by lightning. The first understanding of the chemical nature of combustion, however, was in historic times and has been credited to Lavoisier, Priestly, and/or Scheele.