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CYTOLOGY | STUDY OF CELLS |
ROBERT HOOKE | 1665 -English scientist that cut a thin slice of cork and looked at it under his microscope. To him, the cork seemed to be made up of empty little boxes, which he named cells |
MATTHIAS SCHLEIDEN | 1838 German botanist who determined plants are composed of cells. |
RUDOLF VIRCHOW | 1858 - A doctor who stated that all living cells come from other living cells (part 3 of the cell theory) |
ANTON VAN LEEUWENHOEK | 1673 Dutch naturalist who created a very powerful (for the time period) single lens microscope, He observed pond water. In pond scum he discovered small animals he called animalcules,or little animals (protists),and also discovered bacteria while examining scraping of crud from his teeth. |
EUKARYOTIC | An organism with cells characteristic of all life forms except primitive microorganisms such as bacteria |
CELL | the basic structural and functional unit of all organisms |
THEODORE SCHWANN | German physiologist, histologist, & zoologist who in 1838 and 1839 identified the cell as the basic structure of animal tissue (1810-1882) |
PROKARYOTIC | A single‐celled organism that lacks a membrane‐bound nucleus and specialized organelles. |
DNA | Hereditary information that gets passed on during reproduction. It also directs the cells activities while not dividing. Responsible for the production of proteins. |
EU | true |
PRO | before |
KARY | nucleus |
BIOLOGY | study of life |
THEORY | well-substantiated explanation or a set of statements that have been confirmed over the course of many independent experiments |
LAW | a statement based on repeated experimental observations that describes some aspect of the world |
SCIENCE | gaining knowledge by the systematic study of the structure and behavior of the physical and natural world through observation and experiment. |
ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION | an organism makes more of itself without exchanging genetic information with another organism--offspring has exactly the same genetic information as the parent |
SEXUAL REPRODUCTION | the production of new living organisms by combining genetic information from two individuals of different genders-results in genetic variation of offspring different from parents |
METABOLISM | the sum of the chemical reactions that take place within each cell of a living organism and that provide energy for vital processes and for synthesizing new organic material. |
RESPONSE | living things detect and respond to stimuli from their environment-may be positive or negative |
STIMULUS | a signal to which an organism responds |
UNICELLULAR | single celled |
MULTICELLULAR | many cells |
GENETIC CODE | Directions for inherited characteristics are carried by a DNA. |
HOMEOSTASIS | the ability of a living thing to maintain the same internal conditions in order to stay alive. |
EVOLUTION | the process of change in living things that happens over time |
REPRODUCTION | the process living things go through to make new organisms • DNA is passed from parent to offspring |
POSITIVE RESPONSE | movement towards stimulus |
NEGATIVE RESPONSE | movement away from stimulus |
ADAPTATION | process by which a species becomes fitted to its environment; it is the result of natural selection's acting upon heritable variation over several generations. |