No.
No. Dolly was the first cloned sheep, not cow.
The information is unknown how the first cloned cow was made. The first known cloned cow was named Gene and was cloned on February 7, 1997.
Argentina
It varies in how many times the cow is cloned but usually 2 for health reasons. the original and the clone
The first "cow" (it was actually a calf) in the world to be cloned was named Gene.
This is a false statement. Dolly was the name of the first animal cloned, however, she was a domestic sheep and not a cow. She was cloned on July 5 1996.
The second animal to be cloned after Dolly the sheep was a cow in Japan. In 1998 the twin calves were born cloned from a donor cow. The Japanese scientist were looking into cloning to improve their cattle stains.
The exact same thing that any "normal cow" would eat: grass, hay, silage and grain.
The exact same thing that any "normal cow" would eat: grass, hay, silage and grain.
Yes. Although if can tell a difference in a blind test, that would be an impressive albeit useless skill.
in 1997 the first Transgenic cow was Rosie,who produced human protein-enriched milk at (2.4 grams per litre).The milk contained the human protein alpha lactalbumin.
When you put your mouth up to anything, that transfers the germs from your mouth to whatever you have touched. In this case, you would be transferring your germs to the carton, which means that, if you were to drink it later, the germs would re-transfer. And if you gave the milk to others, there is a possibility that they will get sick. So in theory... YES, drinking out of a milk carton is definitely dangerous.