ok yes i dont know.
She taught the scientists that copying animals were possible.
Dolly the sheep, the first cloned mammal, has contributed to advancements in biotechnology and genetics. She has helped scientists understand cloning processes and potential applications in agriculture and medicine. Dolly also raised awareness about the ethical considerations surrounding cloning and genetic engineering.
The first cloned animal was a dog called "Dolly". Dolly was cloned from a 12 years old parent and lived for 6 years. scientists were concerned about cloning of animals because Dolly showed aging and some major skin changes.After that many different animals were cloned such as cats,rats ...........etc
the people from Roslin Institute took part of Dolly the sheep's embryo out and put another part of her mothers embryo and made a complete match. after Dolly was cloned she was the exact replica of her mother. By: Dakota Breuer and Danielle Roush Pike Valley High School
The first cloned sheep was named Dolly. She was cloned from an adult somatic cell by researchers at the Roslin Institute in Scotland and was born in 1996.
Dolly was not an herbivore, she was a domestic sheep. Dolly was the first mammal cloned from an adult somatic cell using the process of nuclear transfer.
To remember the singer Dolly Parton.
Scientists clone Dolly the sheep
The scientists name was Ian wilmut!
Ian Wilmut, Keith Campbell and their colleagues at The Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland made Dolly the sheep.
Dolly's DNA all comes from the same sheep. It was placed into an ovum from a second sheep; the ovum's DNA had been removed so as not to mix with Dolly's DNA. The ovum was implanted into a third sheep who gave birth to Dolly.
in 1996 scientists cloned the first sheep. the sheeps name was dolly.
so they can teach others
Dolly Margareth Lehmann has written: 'Der EDV-Pionier Nikolaus Joachim Lehmann' -- subject(s): Biography, Computer scientists
The first cloned vertebrate was a sheep named Dolly, which was cloned in 1996 by scientists in Scotland. Dolly was the first mammal to be cloned from an adult somatic cell, rather than an embryo.
Scientists in Scotland named the lamb they cloned in 1997 "Dolly." She was the first mammal to be cloned from an adult somatic cell, marking a significant milestone in genetic research and biotechnology. Dolly was created by a team at the Roslin Institute and was named after the singer Dolly Parton, as the cell used for cloning was taken from a mammary gland.
Ian Wilmut Keith Campbell and colleages at the roslin institute in Edinburgh Scoland
teach, post on the internet, publish in a journal