Slide 1 of 6, Investigating cells with a light microscope, Rotate the objective lenses so that the low-power, eg x10, is in line with the stage.
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Risks
Care must be taken when looking down the microscope if the illumination is too bright.
Care must be taken when using microscope stains.
Care must be taken when handling coverslips and microscope slides.
Drawing the image
Record microscope images using labelled diagrams - or you could produce digital images.
When first examining cells or tissues with low power, draw a diagram at this stage, even if going on to examine the slide with high-power.
A low power diagram is used:
as a plan to show the arrangement of any distinct regions of different tissues, for example the tissues in a plant root
to show the outline of groups of cells that make up the tissue, if the tissue is uniform
A high-power drawing is then produced - a detailed image of a part of the slide. It is usually drawn to show a single cell, eg of a single cheek cell or onion cell.
Make sure that microscope drawings are fully labelled with names, and any extra information to help interpret the drawing, including the scale.