July 1996
No. There is no need for scientists to clone the Tasmanian Forester kangaroo, as its population is healthy enough. Scientists have only tried to clone the Thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) in attempts which have, to date, been unsuccessful.
It is very possible that scientists will be able to clone people some day. The laws will stipulate how the cloning can be done.
In 1997, a Scottish scientist named Ian Wilmut.
No
They aren't scientists! THEY DON'T HAVE THE TECHNOLOGY FOR THAT!
Chaylakhyan, Veprencev, Sviridova, and Nikitin
Scientists clone Dolly the sheep
just cause
dolly was the first clone to be produced from an adult cell
Scientists believe they can extract dinosaur DNA from a fossilised female mosquito,in an attempt to clone a dinosaur.A female mosquito is being used because, only the female feeds on blood.
No scientist haven't yet cloned a human
The adult/adult photographs show the remarkable similarities, of the clone to the original, better than the adult/lamb comparison would.