Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

      • At the age of 19, Glasgow-born Robert Brown was found guilty of a murder he didn't commit. He was arrested in Manchester in 1977 and charged with killing 51-year-old Annie Walsh.
      www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-41108765
  1. People also ask

  2. Robert Brown, a botanist, collected, studied and classified thousands of plant flora he collected from the Flinders expedition to Australia in 1801 – 1805. He described Brownian motion, the movement of small particles in solution, which is named after him and he described and named the plant cell nuclei.

  3. 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.

  4. Though the cell might be the smallest building block, it does not mean to say that it cannot be further subdivided. The cell structure consists of several parts, and in eukaryotic cells this includes the cell nucleus. The person who discovered its existence was a botanist known as Robert Brown.

  5. Robert Brown 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. In addition, he recognized the fundamental distinction between gymnosperms (conifers and their allies) and

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. 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.

  7. Childhood & Early Life. Robert Brown was born to James Brown and his wife Helen on December 21, 1773, in Montrose, a coastal town in Scotland. James was an important member of the ‘Scottish Episcopal Church’, while his wife was the daughter of a priest.

  8. 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.