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Microscopes and the Cell Theory

All About Cells. Microscopes and the Cell Theory. Microscopes of Today. At lot of times, when we think of a object, we think of it as it is today. For example, a cell phone. Cell Phones. So when we think of cell phones, we think of the ones we see today.

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Microscopes and the Cell Theory

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  1. All About Cells Microscopes and the Cell Theory

  2. Microscopes of Today At lot of times, when we think of a object, we think of it as it is today. For example, a cell phone.

  3. Cell Phones So when we think of cell phones, we think of the ones we see today. The ones that we know and many of us use. But what about the original cell phones?

  4. Microscopes Just as there are difference between the cell phones we use now and the original cell phones, there are also differences in the microscopes we use today and what the original scientists who first looked at cells had available to them.

  5. 1723 1764

  6. 1770 1800

  7. 1839 1856

  8. 1865 1876

  9. 1905 1914

  10. 1926 1959

  11. Historical microscope images, and more, can be found at: http://www.techinst.com/antiquecollection.html

  12. The observations and conclusion of many scientists helped to develop the current understanding of the cell. • Robert Hooke • Anton van Leeuwenhoek • Matthias Schleiden • Theodor Schwann • Rudolph Virchow

  13. The Discovery of the Cell • Early Scientists • Robert Hooke (1665) • Observed a cork slick and saw that it seemed to be made up of tiny, empty chambers. • Hooke called these chambers cells, because they resembled the tiny rooms of a monastery.

  14. The Discovery of the Cell • Early Scientists • Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1674) • Used a single-lense microscope to observe pond water • Saw tiny living organisms, which he called “animalcules” and we know today as bacteria

  15. Matthias Schleiden (1838) – concluded that all plants are made up of cells

  16. Theodor Schwann (1839) – concluded that all animals are made up of cells

  17. Rudolph Virchow (1855) – proposes that all cells come from preexisting cells, completing the cell theory

  18. The Cell Theory • Cells are the basic unit of life. • The cell theory states that: • All living things are composed of cells • Cells are basic units of structure and function in living things • New cells are produced from existing cells

  19. The Cell Theory • Remember, before the Cell Theory, we had Spontaneous Generation – that life can arise from nonliving matter. • The scientists who worked to disprove this idea are: • Redi • Spallanzani • Pasteur

  20. Redi’s Experiment

  21. Spallanzani’sExperiment

  22. Pasteur’s Experiment

  23. Exploring the Cell • Common Microscope Types: • Light microscope – living organisms, but low resolution • Electron microscopes - view details 1000 times smaller than visible in light microscopes. Non-living specimens. Requires vacuum. • Scanning Probe microscopes – Can operate in air, and can show DNA, protein molecules, and even single atoms.

  24. Light Microscope

  25. Electron Microscopes • Transmission Electron microscopes – requires thin specimens, can view cell structures and large protein molecules.

  26. Electron microscopes • Scanning Electron microscopes – 3D

  27. Scanning Probe Microscopes

  28. Prokaryote Cells

  29. Eukaryotes Cells

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