The first cloned mammal made her debut in the scientific journal Nature 10 years ago. Here's how Dolly's birth changed the way we think about reproduction


by Alice Park E-Mail this
Phil Schofield / University of Idaho / Getty
BREEDING 2.0

In 2003, researchers at University of Idaho and Utah State University finally found a way to get mules to reproduce. Because they are the sterile result of breeding two separate species (a horse and a donkey), mules normally can't have offspring. Cloning, however, makes it possible for mules to sire, after a fashion, more of their own, like Idaho Gem, above.






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