. Biology and its makers. Biology -- History. 268 BIOLOGY AND ITS MAKERS fessor in the universities of Breslau and Prague. His ana- tomical laboratory at Breslau is notable as being one of the earliest (1825) open to students. He went to Prague in 1850 as professor of physiology. Von Mohl.—In 1846, eleven years after the discovery of Dujardin, the eminent botanist Hugo von Mohl (1805-1872) designated a particular part of the living contents of the vege- table cell by the term protoplasma. The viscid, jelly-like. FIG. 84.—CARL NAGELI, 1817-1891. substance in plants had in the mean time come to
. Biology and its makers. Biology -- History. 268 BIOLOGY AND ITS MAKERS fessor in the universities of Breslau and Prague. His ana- tomical laboratory at Breslau is notable as being one of the earliest (1825) open to students. He went to Prague in 1850 as professor of physiology. Von Mohl.—In 1846, eleven years after the discovery of Dujardin, the eminent botanist Hugo von Mohl (1805-1872) designated a particular part of the living contents of the vege- table cell by the term protoplasma. The viscid, jelly-like. FIG. 84.—CARL NAGELI, 1817-1891. substance in plants had in the mean time come to be known under the expressive term of plant " ; He distin- guished the firmer mucilaginous and granular constituent, found just under the cell membrane, from the water)7 cell-sap that occupies the interior of the cell. It was to the former part that he gave the name protoplasma. Previous to this,. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Locy, William A. (William Albert), 1857-1924. New York, H. Holt and Company
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