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  1. John Needham (born September 10, 1713, London, England—died December 30, 1781, Brussels, Belgium) was an English naturalist and Roman Catholic divine, the first clergyman of his faith to become a fellow of the Royal Society of London (1768). He was ordained in 1738 but spent much of his time as a teacher and tutor.

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    Biology. John Turberville Needham FRS (10 September 1713 – 30 December 1781) was an English biologist and Roman Catholic priest. He was first exposed to natural philosophy while in seminary school and later published a paper which, while the subject was mostly about geology, described the mechanics of pollen and won recognition in the botany ...

  3. Feb 19, 2010 · In the fall of 2006, John deployed with his team from Fort Carson, Colorado to fight the war in Iraq during some of the most intense combat in the war. Army private John Needham began to downward spiral about eleven months into a deployment to Iraq after surviving multiple IED and grenade attacks. He was injured both mentally and physically.

  4. In 1745, John Needham (1713–1781) published a report of his own experiments, in which he briefly boiled broth infused with plant or animal matter, hoping to kill all preexisting microbes. 2 He then sealed the flasks. After a few days, Needham observed that the broth had become cloudy and a single drop contained numerous microscopic creatures.

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    Born in London on 10 September in 1713, John Turbeville Needham was a Roman Catholic priest. He was one of four children to John Needham, a barrister and Martha Lucas. His father died when John was a child and young John became a Franciscan. John studied at the English College at Douai in northern France from 1722 to 1736. He was ordained in 1738, ...

    From 1736 Needham taught at a college in Cambrai, France and in 1740 he moved to England as an assistant master to a Catholic school near at Twyford, Winchester. He spent a short time teaching in Lisbon in 1744, returning to England in 1745 for health reasons. His microscopic observations of blighted wheat while he was in Twyford and his investigat...

    Needham’s microscopic observations were published in “An Account of some New Microscopical Discoveries” in 1745 and further studies were recorded in detail his work “Observations upon the generation, composition and decomposition of animal and vegetable substances” in 1749. Needham established from his observations that micro-organisms do not grow ...

  5. Nov 21, 2023 · John Tuberville Needham was born in London, England, on September 10th, 1713. He was the first clergyman to gain entrance to the Royal Society of London and was both a naturalist and a ...

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  7. Apr 21, 2024 · In 1745, John Needham (1713–1781) published a report of his own experiments, in which he briefly boiled broth infused with plant or animal matter, hoping to kill all preexisting microbes. 2 He then sealed the flasks. After a few days, Needham observed that the broth had become cloudy and a single drop contained numerous microscopic creatures.

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