It was Anton Van Leewenhoek.
All living things (organisms) need water(H2O)
Water; all living things require some water.
living things are part of the water cycle because when ur cooking or boiling water the sun evaporates the water and then the water cycle begins
The first person to see tiny organisms in living water was Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, a Dutch scientist in the 17th century who is considered the father of microbiology. Using a simple microscope he developed, he observed and described various microorganisms, or "animalcules," in water samples.
The process that describes how water cycles through living and nonliving things is called the water cycle. This process involves the movement of water between the atmosphere, land, and oceans through processes such as evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and runoff. Water is essential for all living organisms and plays a vital role in various ecosystems.
mike Robinson
who was the first person to observe living cells in a drop of pond water.
Well its easy first you put living and then things then are awesome or other words it don't madder
all living things drink water
yeah man water is clear You can see large (macroscopic) living things in water, and many microscopic living things as well.
Living things eat, breathe, sleep, drink water and produce offspring. Non-living things do not do any of these things. Non-living things are rocks, sand, air and water.
All living things (organisms) need water(H2O)
Anton van Leeuwenhoek
Water; all living things require some water.
living things are part of the water cycle because when ur cooking or boiling water the sun evaporates the water and then the water cycle begins
Water evaporates out of living things in a hot and dry climate, during an effort, etc.
Sometimes. Usually they are good at preserving water, But every living thing needs water. Like cacti: they need alot of water for the first to weeks after planting. Other things that live in deserts: lizards, camels, spiders, snakes.