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  1. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes research on various aspects of microbiology. It is named after the Dutch pioneer of microscopy and has an impact factor of 2.6 (2022).

    • Volumes and issues

      Part 1: Special Section on Papers from the third meeting of...

    • Submission guidelines

      Exact requirements may vary depending on the journal; please...

    • Aims and scope

      Antonie van Leeuwenhoek is the official journal of the Royal...

    • Articles

      Antonie van Leeuwenhoek is a comprehensive journal dedicated...

  2. Part 1: Special Section on Papers from the third meeting of the Planctomycetes-Verrucomicrobia-Chlamydiae superphylum research community (first 7 articles) Part 2: Regular papers (last 14 articles) Issue 5 May 2018.

  3. Exact requirements may vary depending on the journal; please refer to the journal’s Instructions for Authors. Checklists are available for a number of study designs, including: Randomised trials and Study protocols . Observational studies . Systematic reviews and meta-analyses and protocols

    • Alle de Brieven/Collected Letters
    • A Leeuwenhoek Letter
    • When and Where Did Leeuwenhoek Write?
    • Overview of The Letters
    • What Did Leeuwenhoek Write About?
    • Leeuwenhoek's Letters at The Royal Society
    • Were All of Leeuwenhoek's Letters published?
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    The idea of producing a modern edition of all of the letters written by Leeuwenhoek arose in 1923 during the commemoration of the 200th anniversary of his death (Palm 2005). In 1927, Gerard van Rijnberk (1875–1953), professor of physiology and the longest serving editor-in-chief in the history of the Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde (Dutch J...

    Most of the hand-written manuscripts that Leeuwenhoek sent to the Royal Society are still in its library and several dozen others are in libraries in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, and England. Before 1679, Leeuwenhoek wrote letters on folio pages, but after he was elected to membership in the Royal Society in 1680, he wrote on quarto-sized pages...

    Table 1shows that Leeuwenhoek stayed active throughout his 50-year career. In his most active period, he wrote 2 dozen letters between April and December 1695, once every 10 days, on average. On the other hand, he wrote no letters between April 1689 and September 1691, over 2 years and 5 months. Between April 1689 and January 1692, he addressed onl...

    Leeuwenhoek himself is of some help in grouping his letters. While the 165 letters that he published between 1685 and 1719 come in many bundles, both Dutch and Latin, the most common is a four-volume set, which he called Opera Omniain Latin. 1. Part 1: 25 letters written from 1679 to 1686. 2. Part 2: 31 letters written from 1687 to 1694. 3. Part 3:...

    Leeuwenhoek observed specimens of hundreds of species of animals and plants. He never organized the observations, but as Van Berkel (1982) has argued, Leeuwenhoek's work was much less chaotic than it appears at first sight. A total of four themes account for almost all of the letters. Since modern interest in Leeuwenhoek began in 1932, dozens of re...

    In all seven periods, Leeuwenhoek wrote letters to specific officers of the Royal Society, but beginning in 1684, he most often addressed the letters to the ‘members of the Royal Society’ in general. In London, the letters were often read aloud at a weekly meeting of the Society. The readings were noted in the Society's journal books, but it is pos...

    In a 1715 letter to Gottfried Leibniz, Leeuwenhoek (2018) wrote: When Leeuwenhoek died in 1723, his daughter Maria (1654–1745), who lived her whole life in the Gouden Hoofd, inherited everything (Zuidervaart and Anderson 2016). When she died 20 years later, her father's microscopes were sold at auction. The last page of the auction catalogue (Rees ...

    Learn about the letters of the Dutch microscopist Antony van Leeuwenhoek, who wrote about his observations from 1673 to 1723. Find out how they were published in the Royal Society's Philosophical Transactions and in a modern Dutch and English edition with annotations.

  4. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering microbiology published by Springer Science+Business Media. The journal was established in 1934 and is published monthly. The editor-in-chief is Mike Jetten .

    • Microbiology
  5. www.knvm.org › activities › avl-journalKNVM - AVL Journal

    Antonie van Leeuwenhoek Journal of Microbiology. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek is the official journal of the Royal Dutch Society for Microbiology (KNVM), and we have joined forces to reinvigorate the journal as an outlet for high quality studies in the tradition of the Dutch School of Microbiology.

  6. 1 de dez. de 2023 · Antonie van Leeuwenhoek. (ISSN: 0003-6072, 1572-9699) Table of Contents. From Antonie van Leeuwenhoek. 2023 - 116 (12) Cerina litoralis gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel potential...