he cloned a rat ...... do you want to know how?
well he freezed it and put it in the cloned double decker cloning machined attatched the machines together and...........CUPOW!!!!!!!!! THE CLONE WAS A CLONE OF THE RAT!!!!!!
Ian Wilmut, along with his team at the Roslin Institute in Scotland, cloned the sheep named Dolly using a technique called somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). They took a mature somatic cell from the udder of a Finn Dorset ewe and fused it with an enucleated egg cell from a Scottish Blackface ewe. The resulting embryo was then implanted into a surrogate mother, which eventually gave birth to Dolly. This process demonstrated that a differentiated cell could be reprogrammed to develop into a whole organism.
In 1997, a team led by embryologist Dr. Ian Wilmut successfully cloned the first adult mammal, a sheep named Dolly. This groundbreaking achievement demonstrated that it is possible to clone mammals from adult cells.
Dolly's creator was primarily interested in cloning as a better way to make drugs. Ian Wilmut's sponsor, PPL Therapeutics Ltd., had proven that sheep which were genetically engineered could make certain drugs in their milk. If the sheep could be cloned, they could build a herd of drug producing sheep.
Ian Wilmut created a sheep named Dolly using a process called somatic cell nuclear transfer. This involves taking the nucleus from a somatic cell and inserting it into an egg cell that has had its nucleus removed, resulting in the cloning of an organism.
Jan : pronounced the same as Ian. Like the former South African Prime Minister Jan Smuts.
In 1997, a Scottish scientist named Ian Wilmut.
Ian Wilmut cloned the first mammal from the DNA of an adult mammal.
He cloned a sheep named Dolly.
The scientists name was Ian wilmut!
He is scientist that clones mammal.
No, Ian Wilmut did not call cloning "cloning." He is known for his work in cloning Dolly the sheep, the first mammal cloned from an adult somatic cell, but the term "cloning" was used to describe the process before his work.
The first person to successfully clone an animal was scientist Ian Wilmut, who, along with his team, cloned a sheep named Dolly in 1996.
Ian Wilmut, Keith Campbell and others at the Roslin Institute in Scotland.
Dolly was cloned by Ian Wilmut , Keith Campbell and colleagues at the Roslin Institute near Edinburgh in Scotland.
Chaylakhyan, Veprencev, Sviridova, and Nikitin
Ian Wilmut Keith Campbell and colleages at the roslin institute in Edinburgh Scoland
Ian Wilmut was born on July 7, 1944, in England, UK.