Extending Sight
What makes human eyes unique is the brain, which gives us the power to extend the mechanics of vision. With telescopes and microscopes, we see to the stars and into the living cell.
In 1614, the Italian scientist Galileo was amazed when he looked through one of the first microscopes: “I have seen flies which look as big as lambs and have learned that they are covered over with hair and have very pointed nails by means of which they keep themselves up and walk on glass, although hanging feet upwards, by inserting the point of their nails in the pores of the glass.”
“I discovered living creatures in rain…they sometimes stuck out two little horns, which were continually moved after the fashion of a horse's ears. I imagine that ten hundred thousand of these very little animacules are not as big as an ordinary grain of sand.”
Can you match each picture with what it is?
- A: a butterfly wing
- B: a rose petal
- C: a grain of pollen
- D: an insect
- E: butterfly eggs on a raspberry
- F: tooth decay
Vocabulary
Activity
- Which of these photos is the most interesting photo to you? Why? Explain your answer in a sentence or two.
- Pick an object that you would like to magnify. Tell why you would like to magnify that object. Write a sentence or two for your answer.