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         Cloning:     more books (100)
  1. Whose View of Life?: Embryos, Cloning, and Stem Cells by Jane Maienschein, 2003-12-22
  2. Understanding Cloning (Science Made Accessible) by Scientific American, 2002-03-01
  3. IN HIS IMAGE THE CLONING OF A MAN by David Rorvik, 1978
  4. Gene Cloning: An Introduction by T. A. Brown, 1995-07
  5. Remaking Eden: How Genetic Engineering and Cloning Will Transform the American Family (Ecco) by Lee M. Silver, 2007-08-01
  6. PCR Cloning Protocols (Methods in Molecular Biology) (Methods in Molecular Biology)
  7. The Debate over Human Cloning: A Pro/Con Issue (Hot Pro/Con Issues) by David Goodnough, 2003-01
  8. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Understanding Cloning by Jay D. Gralla, Preston Gralla, 2004-04-06
  9. Gene Cloning and Manipulation by Christopher Howe, 2007-08-06
  10. IN HIS IMAGE The Cloning of a Man by David M. Rorvik, 1978-09-01
  11. Cloning Christ: A Challenge of Science and Faith by Peter Senese, Robert J. Geis, 2003-01
  12. Gene Cloning by Lodge/Lund/Minc, 2006-10-24
  13. Basic Questions on Genetics, Stem Cell Research and Cloning: Are These Technologies Okay to Use? (Biobasics Series) (BioBasics Series) by John Kilner, 2002-12-31
  14. Flesh of My Flesh: The Ethics of Cloning Humans A Reader by Gregory E. Pence, 1998-07-25

21. Applied Genetics News: CLONING: Return To The Future
Cells from six healthy cow clones show no signs of the premature aging reported for Dolly the cloned sheep, according to researchers from Advanced Cell Technologies, Inc.
http://www.findarticles.com/m0DED/10_20/62404373/p1/article.jhtml
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ABNF Journal, The AIDS Treatment News AMAA Journal ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports CLONING: Return to the Future Applied Genetics News May, 2000
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Cells from six healthy cow clones show no signs of the premature aging reported for Dolly the cloned sheep, according to researchers from Advanced Cell Technologies, Inc. (One Innovation Dr., Worcester, MA 01650; Tel: 508/756-1212, Fax: 508/756-0931; Website: www.advancedcell.com). To the contrary, the cloning process seems to have sent the cow cells' aging backward, making them appear even younger than cells from normal cows of the same age. To create the cow clones, the researchers used cells that were near the end of their life span in terms of division cycles, with only a few rounds of cell division left. Surprisingly, they discovered that the cloning process seemed to restore the division potential of these cells in the six cows. Instead of being 0-4 division cycles away from the end of their lives, cells taken from the cows were more than 90 cycles away from their end.

22. New Scientist Expert Coverage Of Sex And Cloning Fertility Cloning
Quest for human cloning ban is abandoned
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

23. Cloning In Focus
The predictions and realities of cloning living beings. What are Some Issues incloning? Consider some important questions in the debate over cloning
http://gslc.genetics.utah.edu/units/cloning/
Genetic Science Learning Center
at The University of Utah
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About Us Feedback ...
What is Cloning?

An introduction to cloning and how it's done. Click and Clone
Try it yourself in the mouse cloning laboratory. Why Clone?
Evaluate the reasons for using cloning techonologies. The Clone Zone
Explore the history of cloning technologies. Cloning Myths
Separating the facts from the fiction. Is it Cloning? Or Not?
Test your cloning savvy with this interactive quiz. What are the Risks of Cloning?
The predictions and realities of cloning living beings. What are Some Issues in Cloning? Consider some important questions in the debate over cloning technologies. Additional Resources Links to current news and in-depth information about cloning. Supported by a Science Education Partnership Award (SEPA) from the National Center for Research Resources, a component of the National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services. See additional acknowledgments

24. Cloning -- Some Stories On Scientists Cloning Humans And Human Embryos.
Overview of cloning and stories.
http://www.freewebs.com/cloning2/
Cloning
Some stories on scientists cloning humans and human embryos.
NAVIGATION Home
30 Embryos

Dolly

Basic Facts About "Cloning" The word clone means to replicate. There are many different types of cloning, including cloning that can be used for regenerative purposes and cloning that can be used for medical purposes. A human clone is an identical twin of another person. A clone is not an exact replica of the original person, but only a younger identical twin. For example, the clone and the original would not have the same fingerprints.
Some fears and dangers of human cloning. Some people fear that someone would create a large army of clones or a large group of workers. This will make a lower class for clones. If scientists are able to clone individuals, then the world will have a loss of genetic variation. Clones may be treated as lower classed citizens. Cloning would bring risks of abuses to human dignity. Cloning humans will also have huge health risks.
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25. Clonaid.com: News
In the future, reproductive cloning will enable all of us to live eternally. By declaring human cloning a crime against humanity, you will just slow
http://www.clonaid.com/
Latest News History Services Products ... Contact Human cloning discussion at the UN Letter sent by Dr. Boisselier to all UN Ambassadors:
At the upcoming 59th session of the General Assembly you will decide whether I am a criminal or not. By the same token you will tell the 13 cloned children that are alive today and all the future ones, whether they are the result of a crime or of the desire of loving parents. You will tell these belated twins whether it is criminal to be a twin or not.
Centuries ago, twins were killed because primitive people thought they were evil. Today ethicists are telling you the same about cloned children, will you let them decide for you? Reproductive cloning is giving life to a few individuals and cannot harm any one. The Hollywood stories of monstruous defects have no real scientific bases if you listen to real experts and I would be happy to demonstrate this to you. In the future, reproductive cloning will enable all of us to live eternally. This is what His Holiness Rael, founder of the Raelian Movement and of Clonaid, announced 30 years ago (see www.rael.org

26. Human Cloning
Covers data on human cloning plus news updates, and full text of The Genetic Revolution by Dr. Patrick Dixon.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

27. What Is Cloning?
Below, we ll see how natural identical twins relate to modern cloning Artificial embryo twinning is the relatively lowtech version of cloning.
http://gslc.genetics.utah.edu/units/cloning/whatiscloning/
Genetic Science Learning Center
at The University of Utah
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About Us Feedback ... Cloning in Focus What is Cloning?
What is Cloning?
Have you ever wished you could have a clone of yourself to do homework while you hit the skate park or went out with your friends? Imagine if you could really do that. Where would you start? What exactly is cloning? Cloning is the creation of an organism that is an exact genetic copy of another. This means that every single bit of DNA is the same between the two! You might not believe it, but there are human clones among us right now. They weren't made in a lab, though: they're identical twins, created naturally. Below, we'll see how natural identical twins relate to modern cloning technologies. How is cloning done? You may have first heard of cloning when Dolly the Sheep showed up on the scene in 1997. Cloning technologies have been around for much longer than Dolly, though. How does one go about making an exact genetic copy of an organism? There are a couple of ways to do this: artificial embryo twinning and somatic cell nuclear transfer. How do these processes differ?

28. Reasons Against Cloning
Featuring videos, articles and ebook against animal and human cloning; by Dr Patrick Dixon.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

29. Howstuffworks "How Cloning Works"
Scientists have successfully cloned several animals. But this success has sparkedfierce debates about the use and morality of cloning.
http://science.howstuffworks.com/cloning.htm
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How Cloning Works
by Craig C. Freudenrich, Ph.D.
Table of Contents Introduction to How Cloning Works Producing Clones: Plant Life Producing Clones: Animal Kingdom Dolly Why Clone? Lots More Information! Shop or Compare Prices Photo courtesy Advanced Cell Technology, Inc. Noah was the first endangered animal to be cloned. On January 8, 2001, scientists at Advanced Cell Technology, Inc., announced the birth of the first clone of an endangered animal, a baby bull gaur (a large wild ox from India and southeast Asia) named Noah. Although Noah died of an infection unrelated to the procedure, the experiment demonstrated that it is possible to save endangered species through cloning. Cloning is the process of making a genetically identical organism through nonsexual means. It has been used for many years to produce plants (even growing a plant from a cutting is a type of cloning). Animal cloning has been the subject of scientific experiments for years, but garnered little attention until the birth of the first cloned mammal in 1997, a sheep named

30. The Center For The Study Of Technology And Society - Biotechnology
A field that brings together agriculture, genetics, cloning, health, medicine and reproductive technology. The Center is a nonprofit research and educational group based in Washington, D.C.
http://www.tecsoc.org/biotech/biotech.htm
Special Focus Pages:
Genome Patents
Designer Babies
Top News DEBATE:
Our Biotech Future (National Review, issue dated 5 Mar 01) OPINION: Eugenics Coming Soon to a Country Near You (National Review, 27 Feb 01) Gene Therapy Prevents Cancer in Mice (BBC, 26 Feb 01) Adopting Frozen Embryos (NY Times, 25 Feb 01 - free registration required) Goats Engineered to Produce Spider Silk in Their Milk (Forbes, issue dated 19 Feb 01) Online Rush to Buy Human Eggs (BBC, 16 Feb 01) Doctors Believe "Brain Pacemakers" Can Treat Wide Range of Illnesses (Wall St. Journal, 16 Feb 01 - free subscription required) The Human Body is Not "Built to Last" (Science Daily, 13 Feb 01) Consumers Want Engineered Food Labeled (Washington Post, 13 Feb 01) A New Genetic Window on Curing Diseases (Washington Post, 11 Feb 01) ESSAY: Implications of the Human Genome Project for Medical Science (Journal of the American Medical Association, 7 Feb 01)

31. Apologetics Press - Human Cloning And Stem-Cell Research-Science's
Human cloning and StemCell Research-Science's "Slippery Slope" Part I by Bert Thompson, Ph.D. and Brad Harrub, Ph.D.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

32. Embryo Cloning, Adult DNA Cloning And Therapeutic Cloning
human cloning reproductive and therapeutic. Therapeutic cloning representsthe ideal in organ transplantation, as it would provide an unlimited source
http://www.religioustolerance.org/cloning.htm
MENU:
HUMAN REPRODUCTIVE AND
THERAPEUTIC CLONING
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Quotations on reproductive cloning:
Conservative position: " ...scientists who envision medical breakthroughs using stem cells from human embryos are now moving on to human cloning breeding people for the purpose of harvesting their tissues and organs from their bodies, then disposing of them. " Liberal position: " Human cloning allows man to fashion his own essential nature and turn chance into choice. For cloning's advocates, this is an opportunity to remake mankind in an image of health, prosperity, and nobility; it is the ultimate expression of man's unlimited potential. "
Quotations on therapeutic cloning:
Conservative position: " Cloning, even so-called therapeutic or experimental cloning, creates a new life without a father, and reduces a mother to the provider of an almost emptied egg. Nonetheless, it is a new human life and the determination to destroy it and limit its use to scientific research for therapeutic ends compound further the moral issues rather than protect mankind. As such, cloning embryonic human life under any circumstance crosses an ethical line, takes an irrevocable step, from which science can never turn back. "

33. To Clone Or Not To Clone The Ethical Question
A lowerlevel university paper discussing both sides of the ethics of human cloning.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

34. Therapeutic Cloning - How It Is Done; Possible Benefits
Therapeutic cloning how it is done; possible benefits.
http://www.religioustolerance.org/clo_ther.htm
THERAPEUTIC CLONING:
How it is done; possible benefits
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Quotations:
" Somatic cell nuclear transfer (more commonly called therapeutic cloning) is about saving and improving lives. It is fundamentally different from human reproductive cloning; it produces stem cells, not babies. " U.S. Newswire " ...[medical] methods that fail to respect the dignity and value of the person must always be avoided. I am thinking in particular of attempts at human cloning with a view to obtaining organs for transplants: these techniques, insofar as they involve the manipulation and destruction of human embryos, are not morally acceptable, even when their proposed goal is good in itself. " Pope John Paul II in an address before International Congress on Transplants on 2000-AUG-29.
What is Cloning?
Cloning is the production of one or more individual plants or animals (whole or in part) that are genetically identical to an original plant or animal. Three very different procedures have been referred to as "cloning." Two are:

35. Behind A Cult And Cloning
New York Times article recounts the history of the Raelians and compares the movement to some historical antecedents, including the Oneida Community. Requires free registration.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/29/weekinreview/29KEVL.html

36. Genetic Engineering And Cloning: Title Page
Gives information and debate positions, both for and against.
http://library.thinkquest.org/19697/

37. TIME Newsfile: Cloning
TIME Magazine content on cloning. TIME covers, and our most popular articles.Enter the TIME Archive Time Archive Collection cloning
http://www.time.com/time/newsfiles/cloning/
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38. Untitled Document
Links to a variety of papers, events, case studies, and Internet resources.
http://ethics.sandiego.edu/applied/bioethics/
This page will automaticaly forward you to the new bioethics page of Ethics Updates. If it does not do so within 5 seconds, click here

39. Cloning
News release that was reported in the journal nature concerning the first reproducible cloning of mammals from adult cells.
http://www.hawaii.edu/ur/News_Releases/NR_July98/cloning.html
University of Hawai'i
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For Immediate Release: July 22, 1998 Contact: Noonan/Russo Communications, 212 696-4455, Ernie.knewitz@noonanrusso.com University of Hawaii, Cheryl Ernst Downloadable graphics accessible, www.noonanrusso.com News release and related materials, www.eurekalert.com or www.noonanrusso.com Video B-Roll available First Reproducible Cloning of Mammals from Adult Cells Reported in July 23 Issue of the journal Nature The first reproducible cloning of a mammal from adult cells, which has successfully yielded three generations and more than 50 identical cloned mice, is reported in the July 23 issue of the international science journal Nature by an international team of scientists, lead by Ryuzo Yanagimachi, of the University of Hawaii. The distinctive cloning technology, described as the Honolulu technique, could be more viable for the production of drugs using transgenic animals than earlier techniques because of its efficiency of reproducibility and, when used in genetic and embryonic development studies, will shed new light on the cellular and molecular activities involved in aging and diseases such as cancer, AIDS, diabetes and multiple sclerosis. The technology has been licensed to the Hawaii-based biotechnology company ProBio America, Inc., for commercialization and to test it for expanded uses. The investigators anticipate that due to similarities between development in mammals the technique will be applicable to larger animals. For example, efficient and accurate cloning can improve the reliability and safety of reproducing transgenic mammals, such as cattle, pigs and sheep, that can be used in the economical production of lower cost protein-based pharmaceuticals. The technique may also be useful for cloning wild or endangered species in a controlled environment.

40. Cloning
Illustrated article and brief history. Provides links to related articles, timelines, photographs and video presentations.
http://www.geocities.com/skews_me/cloning.html
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Cloning
“Clone” derives from the Greek word for “twig”
Scientific American
, May 1997.
cloning i cloning and stem-cell research ii ... quickens Advocates for patients, as well as the biotechnology industry, are strongly in support of therapeutic cloning [The history of cloning dates back more than a century to 1891 Naples when Hans Driesch (see also Adolph Eduard Driesch ), in a controversial experiment, separated the blastomeres of a cleaving sea urchin egg.] He picked [sea urchins] because they have large embryo cells, and grow independently of their mothers. Dreich took a 2 celled embryo of a sea urchin and shook it in a beaker full of sea water until the two cells separated. Each grew independently, and formed a separate, whole sea urchin. In 1902, another scientist, embryologist Hans Spemman [or Spemann pic ), used a hair from his infant son as a knife to separate a 2-celled embryo of a salamander, which also grow externally. He later separated a single cell from a 16-celled embryo. In these experiments, both the large and the small embryos developed into identical adult salamanders.

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