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Cell Biology
Plant,
Animal and Bacteria Cell Models - CellsAlive.com
A tour of human immune cells, bacteria and protozoa:
their life, death and interaction.
The
Virtual Cell Webpage
All the models and animation included on these pages
belong to the Virtual Cell Web Page. They are provided
free of charge to students and teachers for educational
purposes only. The Online Tour of the Virtual Cell Web
Site requires at least Netscape Communicator 4.0 or
Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0.The Virtual Cell Tour
is also fairly simple to navigate. Selecting a section
of the cell will give you a tour of that organelle.
Use the buttons on the top of the frame to rotate the
organelle left and right, and zoom in and out.
Molecular
Expressions - Introduction to Cell and Virus Structure
© 1995-2003 by Michael W. Davidson and The Florida
State University. Scroll down on page to reach links
to clickable diagrams of animal cell structure, bacteria
cell structure, plant cell structure, virus cell structure,
and mitosis.
BioLogica
- 3D Cells
Learn about cell structure and function by viewing QuickTime
movies and interacting with 3D worlds.
The
Cell
Includes descriptions of and diagrams of cells.
Cellular
Biology- Cell Types
ThinkQuest site
Cellupedia
ThinkQuest site
Plant
Cell Types
© Ross E. Koning 1994, Eastern Connecticut State
University.
Cytographics
Galleries
Includes video clips (11 short quicktime clips with
audio, some larger file size mpeg clips of mitosis and
Xenopus embryo development), a stills gallery (beautiful
still images showing the great diversity of the microscopic
world; each image expands with a description) and slide
shows (5 different subjects treated analytically with
a series of annotated stills)
Cell
Photos
Microscope photos of several different types of cells.
From the website of Tim Lynch, science teacher and technology
specialist at Meeker Junior High in Renton, Washington.
Molecular
Expressions - Powers of Ten
View the Milky Way at 10 million light years from the
Earth. Then move through space towards the Earth in
successive orders of magnitude until you reach a tall
oak tree just outside the buildings of the National
High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Tallahassee, Florida.
After that, begin to move from the actual size of a
leaf into a microscopic world that reveals leaf cell
walls, the cell nucleus, chromatin, DNA and finally,
into the subatomic universe of electrons and protons
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