Word: cloninger
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The short answer is no. The slightly longer answer is definitely not. The Jurassic Park idea--amber, insects and bits of frog DNA--would not work in a million years, and it was by far the most ingenious suggestion yet made for how to find dinosaur genes. Cloning a mammoth...
In this, the third installment of TIME's 100 questions for the 21st century, we focus on the great unsolved riddles of space and time and human consciousness. Our journey is necessarily brief--we don't have enough fuel to travel more than 25 years or so into the future...
Dolly was once an awfully lonely sheep. When the famously cloned animal made headlines in 1997, she was the only mammal ever to be manufactured from the cell of an adult donor. Since then, the clone ranks have swelled, with mice and cattle also toddling out of the labs. Last...
The cloned piglets PPL introduced to the world last week were created in just this way, though for this first experiment in pig replication, the scientists left the sugar genes intact. "We wanted to work with pristine cells to make sure our cloning technique would indeed work," says Ayares. Now...
Matt Ridley refers to the study of human genes and the idea of the genome as a book [SCIENCE, Feb. 28]. Well, I sincerely hope that nobody will ever be able to read the DNA book. It would be interesting to know how many people really want the human genome...