Leeuwenhoek was the first person to see anything under a microscope. He put pond water under the microscope and studied tiny animals swimming in the water and called them "animalcules"
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The microscope was first invented and used by Robert Hooke. He looked at slices of cork under the microscope and noticed that they look like the little rooms that monks used. These were called cells. And so came the term cells for what makes up tissues.
The lense
Robert Hooke was the first one to discover cells. In 1663 he observed a piece of cork under a simple microscope and noticed that it looked like the cork was divided into "rooms." He called these "cells." Ten years after that, Anton van Leeuwenhoek was the first to observe living cells.
Robert Hooke observed the dead cells of the cork tree when he looked at a thin slice of cork under his microscope in 1665. This led to the first documented observation of cells in plant tissue, which he described as "cells" due to their resemblance to the cells in a monastery's living quarters.
Hooke first described a cell as looking like a monk' cell (room). He looked at cork cells under a microscope and what he saw were that the cell walls that looked like small rooms. He called them cells because they reminded him of monk's cells.
bodie
robert hooke he looked at a cork and said that it looked like a cell
bacteria
Robert Hooke first observed plant cells under a microscope. He looked at thin slices of cork from a tree and noted the cell walls that he likened to small rooms or compartments, coining the term "cell" to describe them.
The first person to observe cells under a microscope was Robert Hooke in 1665. He looked at cork samples and described them as "cells" because they reminded him of little rooms or cells monks lived in.
Organisms vary in size from the microscope.
the first thing you do you take microscope and you you do it like the low power to the highest power until it get focus.
Organisms vary in size from the microscope.
condenser
True
No, specimens are not put on swings before being looked at under the microscope. Specimens are typically prepared on slides using various techniques such as staining or fixing before being placed under the microscope for observation. Swinging a specimen would not aid in microscopy analysis.
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