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  1. Robert Brown FRSE FRS FLS MWS (21 December 1773 – 10 June 1858) was a Scottish botanist and paleobotanist who made important contributions to botany largely through his pioneering use of the microscope.

  2. Jun 6, 2024 · Robert Brown (born December 21, 1773, Montrose, Angus, Scotland—died June 10, 1858, London, England) was a Scottish botanist best known for his descriptions of cell nuclei and of the continuous motion of minute particles in solution, which came to be called Brownian motion.

  3. Robert Brown, a botanist, collected, studied and classified thousands of plant flora he collected from the Flinders expedition to Australia in 1801 - 1805.

  4. Robert Brown was a leading botanist in his era, very well respected for his excellence in science, and the naturalist on board the HMS Navigator on the historic Flinders voyage to Australia (New Holland) in 1801.

  5. Robert Brown was a botanist from Scotland who was a pioneer in microscopy. He was among the first botanists to describe the nucleus of cells while he also discovered Brownian motion. He was also highly influential in paleobotany, the study of prehistoric plant life.

  6. Robert Brown was a Scottish botanist who is best known for his discovery of the random movement of tiny particles in fluids or gases, now known as Brownian motion. He made significant contributions to the field of botany, largely due to his innovative use of the microscope.

  7. Aug 1, 2016 · Among Albert Einstein’s seminal publications in his “miracle year” ( annus mirabilis) of 1905 was a paper on the motion of small particles suspended in a stationary liquid. That work was rooted in the observations of a 19th century Scottish botanist named Robert Brown.

  8. Robert Brown, a famous botanist from Scotland, was a pioneer in the field of microscopy. He was one of the first botanists to completely describe the nucleus of cells while he also observed Brownian motion. He was also very influential in ‘paleobotany’, the study of primitive plant life.

  9. Robert Brown. (1773–1858). Scottish botanist Robert Brown was born in Montrose, Angus, Scotland, on Dec. 21, 1773. He studied medicine at the universities of Aberdeen and Edinburgh and spent five years in the British army serving in Ireland as an ensign and assistant surgeon beginning in 1795.

  10. Brown was the first person to give the name "nucleus" to the central body of the cell. Perhaps most famously, after observing pollen grains and dust, he described the continuous motion of particles suspended in a gas or liquid which is now known as "Brownian motion".

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