Science and Technology : A Bacterial World..."the human coexistence".

SwagII

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May 26, 2019
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:pc:Believe it or not, the deeper history of life and the greater diversity of life on this planet is "microorganisms, bacteria, protozoans, algae. We definitely exist in a bacterial world. Personally, I think we humans live in their world rather than the other way around. Think about what part the bacterial world plays in the human life cycle. Remember microorganisms are everywhere... Even on our skin and inside our bodies, etc. Talking about a bacterial world, we ar living and existing in it!
 
Robert Hooke
robert-hooke-9343172-1-402.jpg

Prior to 1665, most humans were unaware that the microscopic world existed.

But that year, Robert Hooke published his groundbreaking Micrographia—a book that revealed this previously unseen and unknown world. Hooke was one of a small handful of scientists to embrace the first microscopes, improve them, and use them to discover nature’s hidden details

He used a simple microscope to observe and describe the fruiting structures of molds.


Antoni van Leeuwenhoek
Anthonie_van_Leeuwenhoek_(1632-1723)._Natuurkundige_te_Delft_Rijksmuseum_SK-A-957.jpeg

In 1674, he likely observed protozoa for the first time and several years later bacteria. Those “very little animalcules” he was able to isolate from different sources, such as rainwater, pond and well water, and the human mouth and intestine. He also calculated their sizes.

He observed and described bacteria, protozoa, and red blood cells, despite having no scientific training. He communicated his findings in letters to the Royal Society of London.

 

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