They can but it would be very very expensive and it would be unlikely for success so chances are you wouldn't be able to
No, once a person is cremated, their DNA is destroyed along with their body. Cloning would require intact, viable DNA from the individual, so it is not possible to clone someone who has been cremated.
A person being cloned is typically referred to as the "original" or the "donor."
I'm pretty sure, yes. Because for cloning, you basically only need DNA. Anything they touched, a piece of old hair. Practically anything
for an unnominal fee...
yes, cloned people in Brazil should have equal rights. The same rights that a normal person does.
no person should be cloned
Yes a clone can grow as the normal person that was cloned from.
Nobody knows.... Nobody's been cloned before. They just have cloned animals. No people yet. They COULD clone a person, but nobody said yes when they asked the pregmant mothers.
The first person to clone an animal was Hans Dreisch.
they preserve the dead person from the time of death until they can be buried or cremated
Yes, when a person infected with MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) is cremated, the high temperatures during the cremation process effectively kill the bacteria. The intense heat reaches levels that destroy microorganisms, including MRSA. Therefore, there is no risk of transmission or infection from the cremated remains.
No, the cremated remains of a person, their ashes, do not change over time. The ashes are what is left of the crushed bones and will remain as that.