Microscope Intro
Microscope Intro
Microscope Intro
Marcello Malpighi
was one of the first
great microscopists.
He used the
microscope to see
capillaries, the
microscopically
thin blood vessels
which connect
Marcello Malpighi
arteries and veins.
17th Century Italian
microscope
Robert Hooke, an English scientist, looked at a thin
slice of cork under a microscope. It became clear to
him why cork was very light and could float on water.
He could see that cork was mostly air, with pieces of
material making up a mesh-work of supporting
structure around the tiny air pockets.
Hooke
named these
pockets of
air “cells”
after the
small
monastery
rooms used
Hooke’s cells by monks. Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke was a mechanical genius.
His book, Micrographia, was an important
milestone in proving the importance of
microscopy. While he didn’t at the time
understand the what “cells” were, his name
for them remains.
Hooke’s microscope was a very large
instrument - nearly 2 feet tall! The very
large body tube was attached to the stand
by a screw, and so, by rotation, an object
could be brought into focus.
The object was placed on a pin on the
lower stage, and light illuminated the object
from above.
The illumination came from an oil flame
and a globe (rounded glass container) and a
lens to focus the light.
Robert Hooke’s
Micrographia, printed
in 1665 was an
important milestone in
proving the importance
of microscopy.
Leeuwenhoek’s simple
microscope
Leeuwenhoek experimented with
different metals and made hundreds of
simple microscopes. His lenses were
much better that those in more
advanced scopes.
A specimen is placed on a
pin in front of the lens which
is held in place by two metal
plates.
By 1690, the two leading microscope makers were John
Yarwell and John Marshall. The body tubes could be rotated
and a small glass stage could hold a specimen. The light was
below the stage.
magnification
allows us to
discover hidden
worlds!
The Microscope
by Maxine Cumin
http://www.microsco
peworld.com/MSWor
ld/104_Diagram.pdf