Korea ended the argument about wolf clones
Seoul National University (South Korea) yesterday confirmed a group of researchers cloned two wolves, ending weeks of controversy over whether the group had faked data to
2 wolves named Snuwolf and Snuwolffy (Photo: .physorg.com)
exaggerated achievement.
Two tests determined that "the wolves displayed (in the Seoul Zoo) were cloned", according to the Commission's statement on the honesty in research of Seoul National University, the news agency reported. The AP leads again. The committee said the team did not knowingly " manipulate " the data, but gave an incorrect number of DNA information.
Researcher Lee Byeong-chun in March declared his group successfully cloned two wolves named Snuwolf and Snuwolffy, both of whom were born in October 2005. However, the authenticity of the replication work was later questioned when many young Korean scientists made allegations of data manipulation.
- New tree clones in the Central Highlands
- Discovered 2 new gray wolves in Canada
- Wild beauty of polar white wolves
- Korea: successful mirror wolf
- The trait of wolf dogs is not suitable for pets
- Decode the screeching sound of wolves
- Recognition technology wolf tru
- The 20-year-old girl's wolf taming secret
- SNU investigates wolf replication
- After 100 years, the first wolf appeared in Belgium
- Find out how to clone people
- A wolf in Africa has passed through the scientific world for many years