On July 5, 1996, Dolly the sheep became the first successfully cloned mammal. Ten years on, has cloning developed the way you expected it to?
The following bloggers have weighed in so far:
- Framing Science: TEN YEARS AFTER DOLLY: Less Than a Third of Americans Believe Cloning Animals is Morally Acceptable; Only a Third of Americans Are Clear About the Differences Between Therapeutic and Reproductive Cloning; Less Than a Majority Support Therapeutic Cloning
- Dynamics of Cats: I expect a lot of identical answers to this question!
- The Cheerful Oncologist: AskaSciBlogger Question for July 6th
- A Blog Around The Clock: Cloning - what's the big deal?
- The World's Fair: Dolly is 10 years old? Actually Dolly is dead.
- Evolving Thoughts: Ask a Scienceblogger: Cloning
- Pharyngula: Stem cells, cloning, and the theological opponents of science
- Uncertain Principles: Ask a ScienceBlogger: Easiest Question Ever
- Discovering Biology in a Digital World: Hang on, just let me make a quick clone fall
- The Scientific Activist: Ask a ScienceBlogger: Cloning - Who Cares?
- Pure Pedantry: Ask A ScienceBlogger: On How Cloning Went
- evolgen: Dolly is 10 Years Old
- Chaotic Utopia: Clones are people, too
- Adventures in Ethics and Science: Most of the ethical questions raised by cloning were already with us.
- Gene Expression: Clones are Cool
- Framing Science: TEN YEARS AFTER DOLLY: A Look Back at Framing at Scientific American and Der Spiegel; Understanding the Science Versus Cloning Hitler









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