Nuclear Transfer (a form of cloning).
ian wilmut and kieth campbell, they were the first who clone dolly, first mammal and living thing through the somatic cell by nuclear transfer technique
Dolly was identical in every way to her clone
Dolly's creator was primarily interested in cloning as a better way to make drugs. Ian Wilmut's sponsor, PPL Therapeutics Ltd., had proven that sheep which were genetically engineered could make certain drugs in their milk. If the sheep could be cloned, they could build a herd of drug producing sheep.
No, Dolly the Sheep's offspring were not sterile and were very normal sheep. Dolly had six offspring during her lifetime.
Dolly lived to be 6 years old.
Ian Wilmut Keith Campbell and colleages at the roslin institute in Edinburgh Scoland
IAN WILMUT has written: 'AFTER DOLLY: THE USES AND MISUSES OF HUMAN CLONING'
He cloned a sheep named Dolly.
The scientists name was Ian wilmut!
In 1997, a Scottish scientist named Ian Wilmut.
Ian Wilmut did not call cloning cloning. He was the professor that had cloned Dolly (Andrew) the sheep. Johnny
Dolly was cloned by Ian Wilmut , Keith Campbell and colleagues at the Roslin Institute near Edinburgh in Scotland.
Ian Wilmut,is presently the director of MRC centre for regenerative medicine.He is the first person to clone a mammal sheep,Dolly.
Ian Wilmut, Keith Campbell and their colleagues at The Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland made Dolly the sheep.
Ian Wilmut, Keith Campbell and others at the Roslin Institute in Scotland.
Dolly the sheep was the first mammal to be cloned from an adult somatic cell. She was cloned near Edinburgh by Ian Wilmut, Keith Campbell and their colleagues at the Roslin Institute and the biotechnology company PPL Therapeutics. Dolly was created by inserting the nucleus of a somatic (non-sex) cell into an oocyte (developing ovum/egg) and then using an electric shock to cause this cell to divide. The resulting blastocyst is then implanted into a surrogate mother.
The scientific activity is cloning. Ian Wilmut and his coworkers in Scotland named the sheep born in their clone tests "Dolly". She was the first successfully cloned mammal, in 1996.