That in later years, people will only use it for alcohal bottles
In 1663, Hooke observed the structure of a thin slice of cork using a compound microscope he had built himself. Cork, the bark of an oak tree, is made up of cells that are no longer alive. To Hooke, the cork looked like tiny rectangular rooms, which he called cells.
When Hooke first looked through his mircoscope he broke of a tiny part of cork and found that it was not a solid object but was composed of numerous tiny cavities. They tiny cavities had small cells which made Robert Hook think of the rows of bare rooms or cells in which the monks lived in a monastery, He named what he saw "opening cells"
Robert Hooke. He looked through his microscope and thought the cork looked like little jail cells or rooms, so he called them "CELLS". This took place in 1665.
He did not. The Microscope was invented by Leuwenhoek, a Dutch Lens Grinder in the mid l7Th century in Delftt, a humorous poem was written about it. the original model used compound lenses and had a high magnification of 300 X. Robert Hooke may have made improvements on microscopes, as a hobby manufacturer implied with a kit of Hooke"s microscope circa l962, but he did not Invent the instrument.
Robert Hooke coined the term "cell."
Robert Hooke. He looked at a cork.
He mainly looked at a piece of cork.
Yea... Robert Hooke examamined a cork cell under a microscope. He realized that it looked like tiny boxes which he later named "cells."
The English scientist Robert Hooke looked at cork tissue under a microscope in 1665 and observed small compartments that he called "cells" because they reminded him of the cells in a monastery. This observation gave birth to the term "cell" in biology.
Robert Hookie was the first person to see cells in a cork, the bark of a tree he also then mamed them cells after the laitn term compartment
Robert Hooke found cells when he looked at thin slices of cork through a microscope.
robert hooke he looked at a cork and said that it looked like a cell
Robert Hooke did.
Robert Hooke named the spaces in the cork cell
Hooke looked at the cell in a piece of cork and came up with the name ' cell ' because the square plant cell he was looking at reminded him of monk's living/praying quarters.
Robert Hooke named the spaces in the cork cell
Robert Hooke first observed cells in cork.