1952 is when they successfully used Nuclear Transfer to conceive 27 tadpoles out of 104 experiments
Not really the inventor(s) but the first to clone embryos (Tadpoles in this case) were Thomas King and Robert Briggs.
Gurdon's experiment proved that a cell's genetic potential do not diminish as the cell became specialized, disproving the conclusion of Robert Briggs and Thomas King following their failures to clone from differentiated cells in their 1952 landmark tadpole experiment. Gurdon's results electrified the scientific community, but some scientists remained skeptical and began to find flaws in his work.
The cast of 2 Men and a Clone - 2012 includes: Billy Atchison as Toby Robert McHalffey as Chris
the man owns the clone
Clone commando
clone. Clone is the answer!
No, it is not currently possible to create a clone of a clone. Each clone is a copy of the original organism and does not retain the ability to reproduce on its own.
There is currently no technology that can clone a full human being. While some progress has been made with cloning animals, the ethical and moral concerns surrounding human cloning have prevented it from being pursued. Additionally, cloning a specific historical figure like Thomas Edison raises significant ethical, legal, and scientific challenges.
Its Better To Be A Clone Commander
The first successful cloned frog was created by scientists at the Institute of Biophysics in Moscow, Soviet Union, in 1952. They used a nuclear transfer technique to clone the frog, which was named "Frog Prince."
I would clone myself
yes. just go to professor clone and he will clone them for you.