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  1. Dutrochet was an important figure in biology in. vesicular cells of which they are composed.9. All of the organic tissues of plants are made of cells and observation has now demonstrated to us that the same. the early igth century. His most important work is true of animals.10. was on the subject of osmosis.

  2. (Rene Joachim) Henri Dutrochet. 1776-1847. French physiologist who discovered osmosis. He observed the diffusion of a solvent through a semi-permeable membrane, calling the process osmosis.

  3. He has been given credit for discovering cell biology and cells in plants and the actual discovery of the process of osmosis. His early researches into the voice introduced the first modern concept of vocal cord movement. The Mauritian plant genus Trochetia was named in his honour. Works. New Theory of the Voice (1800) New Theory of Harmony (1810)

  4. Milne-Edwards, H. Dutrochet, and T. Schwann. Among them, Henri Dutrochet (1776–1847), a self-taught French medical doctor, is probably the least recognized. The aim of this article is to relate the life of this independent investigator and show his contribution to the identification of the cell as the basic building block of plant and animal ...

  5. www.nature.com › articles › nbt0805-941NEWS AND VIEWS - Nature

    In 1824, the French physiologist René Joachim Henri Dutrochet laid the basis of cell theory by postulating that cells surrounded by mem-branes form the building blocks of all plant and...

    • Patrik D'haeseleer
    • 2005
  6. A few years later, René Joachim Henri Dutrochet (1776–1847), who had discovered the osmotic phenomenon, claimed that cells constituted plants. However, in the wall of these cells there could be some little globules that could be the fundamental entities.

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  8. Dutrochet and the Cell Theory. S. J. Holmes, Walter Wilson. Published in Isis 1 May 1947. Biology, History, Philosophy. TLDR. The evidence seemed to him sufficient to justify the view that species and even larger groups arise by transmutation, and von Baer appears to have been finally convinced that he could not logically avoid extending the ...

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