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Cell theory that cells could appear spontaneously
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Dutch technicians invented the first compound microscope using two lenses in a tube
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By looking at thin slices of corks with a compound telescope, he described what he saw as 'cells'. He described these cells as "perforated and porous, much like a honeycomb." He also said they looked like the rooms the monks stayed in.
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Anton van Leeuwenhoek made his own compound microscope and discovered unicellular organisms by studying stagnant water. Anton described them as 'animalcules' since they looked like little animals.
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The scientist Leeuwenhoek discovered bacteria from the tartar on his teeth
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French microscopist Henri Dutrochet theorised all plant and animals organisms are composed of cells. But there was no evidence
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While Robert Brown was studying the cells of orchids under a microscope, he located a structure inside the cell, which he named the 'nucleus'.
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While Schleiden was studying plant cells and realised all plants were made from plant cells, Schwann was studying animals and stated all animals were made of animal cells. They then joined together and concluded all living matter is composed of cells. First statement in cell theory - all matter is made up of cells. Second statement is cells are in the basic unit structure.
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The Czech physiologist, Johannes Purkinje, coins the word 'protoplasm' to define the contents of a cell
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Rudolf stated that 'where a cell exists there must have been a pre-existing cell, just as the animal arises only from an animal and the plant only from a plant.' Although Schleiden initially did not agree with this and thought cells spontaneously appear (free cell formation), he was proven wrong by Rudolf's research. This was the final part of the cell theory.
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Contributed to the cell theory by disproving spontaneous generation. He was the first scientist to prove that cells can only form from pre-existing cells. He did this by creating an experiment with an s-shaped tube that showed cells would only grow in broth if air was exposed
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Carl Zeiss and Ernst Abbe created the first oil immersion objectives which allowed 1000x magnification.
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The German biologist observes biological stained and living cells to verify Virchow's idea that cells divide. He described this division as mitosis