Daily Almanac for
Jan 16, 2009
Search White Pages
Info search tips
Bio search tips

Cloning Milestones



1938
Cloning envisioned. Dr. Hans Spemann (Germany) proposed an experiment to remove the nucleus from an unfertilized egg and replace it with the nucleus from a differentiated cell.
1953
Structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) discovered by Francis C. Crick (U.K.) and James D. Watson (U.S.).
1970
Dr. John B. Gurdon (U.K.) clones a frog by transplanting the intestinal cell of a tadpole into an enucleated frog egg, which develops into an adult frog.
1973
First successful gene splicing (recombinant DNA) by Paul Berg and Stanley N. Cohen (U.S.). A major breakthrough in genetic engineering.
1978
Birth of first child, conceived by in vitro (literally “in glass”) fertilization to Leslie Brown (U.K.).
1980
U.S. Supreme Court rules that a genetically created new bacterium (a non-natural manmade microorganism) may be patented.
1984
Dr. Steen M. Willadsen (Denmark) clones a lamb from a developing sheep embryo cell. His experiment is repeated by other scientists who clone a variety of animals.
1994
Dr. Ned First (U.S.) clones calves from cells of early embryos.
1995
Drs. Ian Wilmut and Keith Campbell (U.K.) create the world's first cloned sheep, Megan and Morag, from embryo cells.
1996
Dr. Ian Wilmut and his team clone the world's the first sheep from adult cells. The lamb born in July 1996 is named Dolly.
1997
Scientists at Oregon Regional Primate Research Center (U.S.) create first primates—two rhesus monkeys named Neti and Ditto—from DNA taken from cells of developing monkey embryos. They are not genetically identical because two different embryos were used.
1997
A team led by Drs. Ian Wilmut and Keith Campbell (U.K.) create the first sheep with a human gene in every cell of its body. The genetically engineered lamb is named Polly.
1999
Dr. Gerald Schatten (U.S.) leads a team of researchers who become the first to create a clone (Tetra, a rhesus monkey) by embryo splitting.
1999
Dr. Xiangzhong Yang leads a U.S. experiment to clone calves from frozen cells taken from a Japanese bull. The experiment is successful and proves that cells can be stored for later cloning.
2000
The first patents for cloning are given to the scientists who cloned Dolly, giving their company, Geron Bio-med, exclusive right to the technologies they used.
2000
Japanese scientists clone a baby bull from a bull that was a clone itself, the first re-cloning case involving a large mammal.
2000
Five piglets are cloned by a company the eventually wants to reproduce organs for humans.
2001
Scientists at Advanced Cell Technology in Massachusetts clone human embryos for the first time.
2001
President Bush limits federally funded human embryonic stem cell research to stem cell lines that have already been created.
2001
A cat, called C.C. for “carbon copy” is cloned by a company that wants to go into business reproducing pets.
2002
California becomes the first U.S. state to approve a law legalizing the therapeutic cloning of embryos.
2003
Britain becomes the first country to issue research licences for human embryonic cloning to create stem cells. It specifies therapeutic, not reproductive, cloning.
2004
Britain announces the first embryonic stem cell bank.
2005
South Korea clones a dog names Snuppy, Dogs are considered particularly difficult to clone because of the complex reproductive biology.

Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.

Cloning: Facts and FallaciesLife ScienceClassification of the Dinosaurs
    • Cite
    • Print
    • Bookmark

More on Cloning Milestones from Infoplease:

  • Timeline Archive - A collection of all timelines on the site—categories include World History, U.S., Countries, Entertainment, Sports, War, Health & Science, and more
  • Homework Center: Science and Technology - Subjects » Geography » History » Language Arts » Mathematics » ...
  • Information Please: 1995 - 1995 Previous Year | Next Year World | U.S. | Economics | Sports | Entertainment | Science | Deaths ...
  • Information Please: 1994 - 1994 Previous Year | Next Year World | U.S. | Economics | Sports | Entertainment | Science | Deaths ...
  • Information Please: 1997 - 1997 Previous Year | Next Year World | U.S. | Economics | Sports | Entertainment | Science | Deaths ...