Preview

Assess the impact of technology on the development of cell theory. In particular, include the development of the microscope and give evidence where possible.

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
492 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Assess the impact of technology on the development of cell theory. In particular, include the development of the microscope and give evidence where possible.
Since Galileo began using a rudimentary compound microscope in 1609, whole new ranges of objects not known to even exist were discovered from that basic piece of technology. The microscope played the key role in discovering cells, and as it advanced with technology, so too did the cell theory.

In 1665, scientist Robert Hooke used a microscope to look at slices of cork. He noticed that the cork was divided up into hundreds of tiny little compartments that he named cells. Hooke was the first person to acknowledge cells, and this was when the cell theory began.

In 1758 a spectacle manufacturer John Dollard, patented an almost completely achromatic lens that made colour-free refracting telescopes possible. Later on in 1821 Giovan Battista Amici attempted to increase the resolution of the microscope, and invented the oil immersion techniques that brought microscopes to their greatest resolution, allowing far more detailed scientific work to progress.

A French microscopist Henri Dutrochet in 1824, proposed that all organisms are made of cells. There was general support of this theory in the scientific community, as experiments undertaken seemed to point towards this. However, a lot of people still believed in spontaneous generation.

It wasn't until 1864 that Louis Pasteur dispelled the theory of spontaneous generation through an experiment with microbes on dust particles becoming lodged in swan necked flasks. Air entered the flask but no microbes grew in the boiled broth inside the flasks. Pasteur developed heat sterilisation techniques and used the most powerful sort of compound microscope of the day to look at the bacteria. Although difficult to see, Pasteur could see that they were multiplying. His discovery was important in disproving the spontaneous generation theory of cells, in which cells were created out of nothing.

In 1831 a British botanist Robert Brown noticed what he named the cell nucleus, which biologist Mathias Schleiden suggested might be important

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Unit 8.3.1 Study Guide

    • 4808 Words
    • 20 Pages

    * Outline the historical development of the cell theory, in particular, the contributions of Robert Hooke and Robert Brown…

    • 4808 Words
    • 20 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Before Virchow, one idea was that living things could arise from non-living and from dead matter, a process called ‘spontaneous generation’.…

    • 1199 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Bill Bryson

    • 287 Words
    • 2 Pages

    3. Louis Pasteur was the man who proved that life had to come from preexisting cells. He created the “cell theory”! This is an essential to modern biology. (Found on page 376)…

    • 287 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The development of the compound microscope by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek in the 17th Century was an example of change, because the microscopes before this time were not powerful enough to see things like capillaries and germs.…

    • 167 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Galileo Research Paper

    • 1152 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Hearing early in 1609 that a Dutch optician, named Lippershey, had produced an instrument by which the apparent size of remote objects was magnified, Galileo at once realized the principle by which such a result could alone be achieved, and, after a single night devoted to consideration of the laws of refraction, he succeeded in constructing a telescope which magnified three times, its magnifying power being soon increased to thirty-two.…

    • 1152 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Cell Theory

    • 1080 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In 1838, Theodor Schwann and Matthias Schleiden were enjoying after-dinner coffee and talking about their studies on cells. It has been suggested that when Schwann heard Schleiden describe plant cells with nuclei, he was struck by the similarity of these plant cells to cells he had observed in animal tissues. The two scientists went immediately to Schwann's lab to look at his slides. Schwann published his book on animal and plant cells (Schwann 1839) the next year, a treatise devoid of acknowledgments of anyone else's contribution, including that of Schleiden (1838). He summarized his observations into three conclusions about cells:…

    • 1080 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Light microscopes had been developed to a point where the quality of the lenses was not limiting the detail in the image, the main limiting factor was the wavelength of light which limits the resolving power, the best light microscope could only magnify up to 200x, this meant that no new information about sub-cellular structure could come to light. In 1928 Ernst Ruska and his supervisor Max Kroll built the first electron microscope but it was not until 1933 that images could be magnified up to 1200x and during world war two Ruska achieved a magnification of one million times.…

    • 644 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Cell Organelles

    • 1735 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The studies of Robert Hooke 1665 into a plant material would allow the determination of a pore like regular structure surrounded by a wall of which he called ‘cells' this in itself unbeknownst to him, was the discovery of the fundamental unit of all living things.…

    • 1735 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Italians paved the road to the invention of the microscope when they discovered how to grind lenses during the 1300's, and as a result, created the first spectacles. The first microscope was developed in 1590 by two Dutch lens grinders and spectacle makers Hans Janssen, father, and Zacharias Janssen, son, when they put two grinded lenses inside a tube. Later in the 1700's, many discoveries were made to improve the microscope. One was that lenses combining two types of glass could reduce the chromatic effect the previous microscopes had. Then, in 1830, Joseph Jackson Lister came up with another way of improving microscopes. He reduced the problem of spherical aberration by using several weak lenses together at different distances giving good magnification without blurs. All of theses microscopes were light microscopes, however, so they were not powerful enough for the growing demand of magnification. This was soon solved when, in 1903, the ultramicroscope was developed by Richard Zsigmondy which could study objects under the wavelength of light, and in 1938, the electron microscope was developed by Ernst Ruska which greatly improved the resolution and magnification, and expanded the borders of exploration.…

    • 650 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cell Theory

    • 456 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In the 1800s, the cell theory was developed. This theory states that cells are found in all living things making them the basic units of life and that all cells come from other cells. In order to be classified as a cell, the object in question must be able to reproduce, respond to chemical signals, obtain energy, maintain homeostasis, and undergo evolution. All cells can be divided into two different categories: prokaryotes or eukaryotes. Bacteria and archaea are classified as prokaryotes while animals and plants are eukaryotes. Prokaryotes are small and unicellular. Due to their small size, they do not have…

    • 456 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Later, the development of optic and electronic microscopes showed game-changing differences in cell organisms, mainly the presence or absence of distinct nucleus, leading Édouard Chatton to distinguish organisms in prokaryotes (without a distinct nucleus) and eukaryotes (with a distinct nucleus) in a paper from 1925. he was the first person to discover the difference between eukaryotic and prokaryotic systems.…

    • 221 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    believed in cells. As you can see the impact of cells was very great on people.…

    • 341 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cell theory

    • 689 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The cell was first discovered by Robert Hooke in 1665. He examined (under a coarse, compound microscope) very thin slices of bottle cork and saw a multitude of tiny pores that he remarked looked like the walled compartments a monk would live in. Because of this association, Hooke called them cells, the name they still bear. However, Hooke did not know their real structure or function.[2] What Hooke had thought were cells were actually just empty cell walls of plant tissues, but without ever thinking that cells could be alive, and also since his microscope had a very low magnification, making it difficult to observe the internal organization of the structure he had discovered, he did not think his "cellulae" could be alive.[3] Hooke's description of these cells (which were actually non-living cell walls) was published in Micrographia.[4] His cell observations gave no indication of the nucleus and other organelles found in most living cells.…

    • 689 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Microbiology Notes

    • 2954 Words
    • 12 Pages

    An organism or virus too small to be seen without a microscope. (Smaller than 0.5 mm)…

    • 2954 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    1609-1610 – Galileo Galilei built his own refractor telescopes to observe the sky, and discovered Saturn’s rings, Jupiter’s moons, and along with many other significant discoveries.…

    • 1228 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays