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Living Things are Different From Nonliving things (All organisms get water…
Living Things are Different From Nonliving things
All organisms get water and materials from the environment.
Living things have these characteristics: organization, ability to grow and develop, ability to respond to the environment, ability to reproduce.
Any individual form of life that uses energy to carry out its activities is an organism.
All Living Things Are Made Of Cells
The needs and characteristics of singled cell in a unicellular organism are the same as those for any organism.
Multicultural organisms have different types of cells that make up their body parts and help the organisms meet their needs.
There are multicellgular and unicellular.
The Microscope Led to the Discovery of Cells
Robert Hooke invented the microscope.
Most cells are microscopic so you need a microscope to see them.
The cell that Robert Hooke described were dead. Anton van Leeuwenhoek was the first person to describe living cells.
Cells Come From Other Cells.
Scientists started to wonder were cells came from.
People started to ask if all things were living after the discoveries of Hooke and Leeuwenhoek.
One living cell splits into two living cells.
The Cell Theory is Important to the Study of Biology.
Pasteurization was invented to keep people from getting sick.
Louis Pasture invented pasteurization.
Theorys lead to research.