the people from Roslin Institute took part of Dolly the sheep's embryo out and put another part of her mothers embryo and made a complete match. after Dolly was cloned she was the exact replica of her mother.
By: Dakota Breuer and Danielle Roush Pike Valley High School
First scientists took an egg from the uterus of a sheep and removed the egg's nucleus(center), leaving the egg empty.Then scientists took a cell from the udder of another sheep and removed its nucleus.Next they inserted the nucleus from sheep #2 into the empty egg of sheep #1.They put this egg inside a diffrerent sheep.Inside sheep #3, the egg grew into an embryo and finally a baby sheep named dolly was born.
The scientists wanted for Dolly to carry a human protein in her milk that would help combat diseases.
She was cloned by Ian Wilmut, Keith Campbell and colleagues at the Roslin Institute near Edinburgh in Scotland.
fusion of an adult cell's nucleus with an enucleated sheep egg, followed by incubation in a surrogate
At Roslin Institute
Because....
She was the first successful clone of a sheep.
You do not ' clone ' water, you produce it in chemical reaction. 2H2 + O2 >> 2H2O NaOH + HCl >> NaCl + H2O Like that. Dolly was a proof of concept experiment out of which something useful may come. Pure research is like that.
126 animals no people 126 animals no people
Dolly was the the name of the Sheep that was the first mammal ever cloned, but the first animal ever cloned was a tadpole. And I don't know if they named it or not. That was back in 1952.Dewey(Deer)
Scientists wanted to clone sheep to ultimately learn how to clone a human. But after the failure of cloning the sheep Dolly, many people went against it and cloning against humans is banned in some areas and frowned upon in most.
Dolly died at the age of six. Dolly herself was a clone, I don't believe a second clone exists.
Dolly and the sheep from which she was cloned have identical genes.
dolly (the sheep) is a clone of another sheep
PORRIDGE
yes you can as dolly the sheep was a clone
dolly was the first clone to be produced from an adult cell
nucleus transfer
because she is a clone
Dolly
Scientists clone Dolly the sheep
Dolly was identical in every way to her clone
In biological terms, a clone is a living thing. For example, Dolly the sheep was a clone, and clearly she was a living thing.