A man named Antonie van Leeuwenhoek at the turn of the 1700's.
He saw that all living things have cells.
Likely the chinese.
no. It was actually technically the vikings that came first.
who was the first person to observe living cells in a drop of pond water.
it was the English scientist Robert hooke
In 1600
Who- YA MAM When- WHEN YA GET A WASH
The scientist who first observed cells was Robert Hooke. He observed cells in a piece of cork under a microscope in the 17th century and coined the term "cell" to describe the small compartments he saw.
Robert Hooke did not discover blood cells. He was the first person to see cells. He saw cells of the oak plant in cork. He viewed a tiny slice of cork under his microscope and saw small compartments which he called cells.
Robert Hooke was the first person to see cells. He saw them with a compound-microscope.
, I can awnser your question. Well mr.hooke could have call what he first saw hookes but instead he called them cells
I think it was Anton van Leeuwenhoek who first described cells.
The first man to observe cells was Robert Hooke in 1665. He used an early microscope to examine a thin slice of cork and described the small, box-like structures he saw as "cells."
Robert Hooke found the first cell in a sliced open cork.Under a microscope.
Antonie Philips van Leeuwenhoek saw them first while using his primitive homemade microscopes.
Anton van Leeuwenhoek did not call anything he saw in his microscope cells, Robert Hooke did when he saw some plant material in his microscope for the first time. He said they reminded him of monk's living quarters.
The first recorded observation of cork cells was made by English scientist Robert Hooke in 1665. He viewed thin slices of cork through a primitive microscope he had constructed, describing the cells he saw as resembling small, empty rooms or compartments.