ScienceIQ.com

Why Don't We Try To Destroy Tropical Cyclones?

There have been numerous techniques that we have considered over the years to modify hurricanes: seeding clouds with dry ice or Silver Iodide, cooling the ocean with cryogenic material or icebergs, changing the radiational balance in the hurricane environment by absorption of sunlight with carbon black, blowing the hurricane apart with hydrogen ...

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TropicalCyclones
Physics

Many Happy Returns!

The boomerang is a bent or angular throwing club with the characteristics of a multi-winged airfoil. When properly launched, the boomerang returns to the thrower. Although the boomerang is often ... Continue reading

ManyHappyReturns
Astronomy

Reading The Colors of the Spectrum

Did you ever wonder how scientists can tell us so much about distant stars, for example, the surface temperature or chemical makeup of a star, light years away from Earth? Scientists can only use what ... Continue reading

SpectrumColors
Engineering

Red Dot Replacing Cross Hairs

A bullet fired from a gun becomes subject to the pull of gravity and begins to fall the instant it leaves the gun barrel. The farther away from the gun the bullet travels, the lower to the ground it ... Continue reading

RedDotReplacingCrossHairs
Geology

Metamorphic Rock

There are three rock types on earth, named according to how the rock is formed. Igneous rock forms as it cools to a solid from molten rock. Sedimentary rock is formed from the consolidation of ... Continue reading

MetamorphicRock

Embryo Transfer and Cloning

EmbryoTransferandCloningScientists use embryo transfer technology to obtain more offspring from a genetically superior animal. For instance, if a farmer owns a cow that produces excellent milk and wants more cows to produce milk like hers, he can use embryo transfer. How? A scientist collects an embryo (a fertilized ovum) from the cow (called ‘the donor’) and transfers it to another cow (‘the recipient’) to complete the gestation period. With normal reproduction a cow would give birth to 6 or 7 calves during her lifetime; with embryo transfer the same number can be obtained in less than a year.

Embryo transfer is required for other reproductive technologies like in vitro fertilization, sperm injection, and cloning by nuclear transfer. In fact, embryo transfer is the predecessor of cloning. But the transition between embryo transfer and cloning was gradual.

In 1952, nuclear transfer experiments with adult frog cells produced viable embryos, but they didn't develop beyond the tadpole stage. In 1986, Steen Willadsen in Cambridge, England, used nucleus transfer to produce sheep. He used embryo cells rather than adult cells. During that time, a company in Texas, Granada Biosciences, employed Willadsen to do nucleus transfer cloning. Granada produced hundreds of calves by nucleus transfer cloning during the '80s and '90s. Finally, in 1997, a group in Scotland used an adult cell from the mammary gland of a sheep, and produced offspring by nuclear transfer; Dolly became the first mammal cloned from an adult cell.