he was a n1gger and he fuk3d his mom twice.
During the 1660's an English naturalist called Robert Hooke designed a microscope. It was not unlike simple school microscopes that are used today and relied on sunlight to illuminate the image. In 1665, Hooke made an accidental observation while looking at a thin slice of cork under his microscope. He saw something that he described as 'looking like a honeycomb with a great many little boxes'. Hooke called these boxes cells. He used this term to describe units in plant tissue (thick cell walls would be observed). He only saw the cell walls because cork cells are dead and without protoplasm.
yes cork does have a large vacuoles because it is a plant cell. all plant cells have vacuoles that take up most of the volume in a plant cell. cork is a non-living cell from the bark of a cork oak tree. hope this answered your question!;)
It took several decades for the scientific community to fully accept the existence of cells after their discovery in the mid-17th century. Early microscopists like Robert Hooke and Antonie van Leeuwenhoek provided crucial observations that eventually led to the widespread recognition of cells as the fundamental unit of life.
150 years
The discovery of germs took place in various locations and time periods by different scientists. However, one of the most significant discoveries was made by Louis Pasteur in France in the 19th century through his experiments on fermentation and germ theory. Robert Koch in Germany also made crucial contributions to the understanding of how germs cause disease.
Robert Hooke was the first to observe cells in a cork slice under a microscope, which he likened to the small rooms or "cells" that monks lived in. This discovery laid the foundation for the cell theory and revolutionized our understanding of biology.
Robert Hooke hascriticizedNewton when he initially presented his ideas to the Royal Society and Newton did not take kindly to that response. Rather than undergo more ridicule by his peer Newton just waited for Hooke to die and then published it uncontested.
During the 1660's an English naturalist called Robert Hooke designed a microscope. It was not unlike simple school microscopes that are used today and relied on sunlight to illuminate the image. In 1665, Hooke made an accidental observation while looking at a thin slice of cork under his microscope. He saw something that he described as 'looking like a honeycomb with a great many little boxes'. Hooke called these boxes cells. He used this term to describe units in plant tissue (thick cell walls would be observed). He only saw the cell walls because cork cells are dead and without protoplasm.
There are no direct flights from Cork to Sydney or Cork to Los Angeles, so you would need to take a number of flights to get to either of them if starting from Cork. However, Sydney is much further from Cork than Los Angeles is, so it would take much longer to get there.
Many people said that he was a noble, straight man but records have shown that he was slightly hunched back and would take the chance to ruin any rival scientist's reputations.
Well it maters what temperature the freezer is. If it is 0 degrees it should take about 2 to 3 hours but if it's slices it should take less
Cork is a soft and somewhat spongy floor. Sealers can be applied to it to make it more durable but they take away somewhat the feel of cork flooring.
Cork is the largest county in Ireland, so it would depend on where you are starting from. If you use the example of Cork city to Kildare town, it would take bout 2 hours in good traffic.
Yes
2.30hrs
From Cork city to Sligo town, depending on the route you take and the amount of traffic as you are travelling, it would take about four and a half hours.
Driving from cork to kerry airport is very straightforward. It can take from an hour and a half to two hours!