Splitting Embryos
Hans Driesch was the first to clone animals in the late 1800s by splitting a sea urchin embryo. Hans Spemann had similar results with a salamander in 1902. Fifty years later Robert Briggs and Thomas Joseph King cloned a frog embryo by transferring a cell nucleus into an unfertilized egg cell--a technique still in use today.
Cloning Mammals
The first mammals were cloned from embryos by two independent teams in 1986: Steen Willadsen's team cloned a sheep, Neal First's team a cow. Ian Wilmut's team at the Roslin Institute in Scotland was the first to clone a cell from an adult: Dolly the sheep was created in 1996. Ryuzo Yanagimachi and team cloned the second live mammal, a mouse, in 1997 and were first to clone successive generations.
Implications
Some people believe cloning interferes with God's role as creator. Others fear cloning will upset the natural course of evolution or be misused by malevolent people. The theological, ethical and moral debate must continue to ensure science benefits mankind and the planet.