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Colin P

Why Clone? - 1 views

  • Cloning animal models of disease Much of what researchers learn about human disease comes from studying animal models such as mice. Often, animal models are genetically engineered to carry disease-causing mutations in their genes.
  • To clone or not to clone: that is the question. The prospect of cloning humans is highly controversial and raises a number of ethical, legal and social challenges that need to be considered.
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    This is a site that show why people clone things
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    Just fix your tagging put animal cloning together by putting " " around it and do that with the tagging of the science article too so its one word. This isn't really a science article it's just saying why you should clone and giving pros and cons.
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    I don't think this a science article since it's not very informative on what cloning is and the process.
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    Is this a scientific article? Or is this something different with just lots of information about animal cloning? This link has lots of information about animal cloning but it does not have anything that supports this information.
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    check tags
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    both your team mates are correct. Not a science article
Emma Chowdhury

Forensic DNA technology: A powerful tool for judicial reform | Science and Technology, ... - 0 views

  • Recent advances in forensic DNA testing are now paving the way for reforming the manner by which cases are resolved in courts of law through the way suspected offenders are apprehended during a criminal investigation. Firstly, the availability of new markers which are more variable across different populations, adds to the increased power of discrimination once more genetic markers are used. From the time when DNA testing only involved seven to nine genetic markers to evaluate if crime scene evidence matches a suspect’s profile, as well as to determine relationships, to the current battery of 21 autosomal markers and 23 male-specific markers, the capacity of DNA profiling to differentiate individuals has increased significantly. The use of automated and expert systems for large-scale analysis has also been found to reduce manual errors and to increase output per unit time. The use of several dyes in a single multiplex system provides more information from the same amount of genetic material compared to reactions targeting only one genetic marker but requiring the same amount of DNA that was common in the early 1990s.
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    This is about how they have new technology for forensic DNA sciences, so they make less mistakes and can find the person quickly. For example, they now have automatic systems to test DNA.
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    What is the media type???
Colin P

Colin "animal cloning science article - 0 views

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    What media type is this? Opinion? Article?
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    Hey colin could you fix your tagging? Just put animal cloning together by " " doing that around it and put your name and what media type this is. Just do this for one below too. It's a really good website :)
Alisa H

HowStuffWorks "What's stronger -- nature or nurture?" - 0 views

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    Science Article, about what is stronger nature or nurture.
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    This is good information but its not a science article
woojin kim

More Science Needed for Forensic Investigations: Scientific American - 0 views

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    This is interesting but its a news article. Not a science article (study) ...what category does it fit into?
Avantika B

Animal Clones: Double Trouble? | Science News for Kids - 0 views

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    What media type is this? Is it a blog, description of a technique? Science article? I am not sure. You haven't tagged it.
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    It's from 2004 so it's too out-dated.
Colin P

Cloned animals aren't identical - we're still far from the perfect clone - 1 views

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    This science artical explains why cloned animals are not identical
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    This is a good one for technique!
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    This is a good one for technique!
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    so are you talking about the technique they have discussed here? Then you haven't tagged it correctly.
Inga V.

NIH OSE - Research in the News: Creating A Cloned Sheep Named Dolly (Grades 9-12) - 0 views

  • What is a Clone
  • In biology, a clone is a cell or an organism that is genetically identical to another cell or organism.
  • How was Dolly Created? Dolly is different. She was generated from a specialized adult cell, not from an unspecialized embryonic cell.
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  • Why is Dolly so special?
  • Why did researchers create Dolly?
  • created Dolly because they are trying to find ways to produce livestock that carry specific genetic traits.
  • find ways to produce animals that carry certain proteins in their milk.
  • if researchers can develop animals with desirable characteristics, they can then clone those animals to produce entire herds that carry the same traits.
  • Scotland tried 277 times to create cloned sheep, and they succeeded only once.
  • Dolly is special because she disproves the notion that cells from an adult animal are too specialized to generate a new organism.
    • Inga V.
       
      This basically says that Dolly is special proves the theory wrong that the cells from an adult animal are too specialized to make a new baby.
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    This is a science article and it has lots of information about animal cloning. It explains what a clone is in detail, has lots of diagrams to show what it means and lots of information about dolly.
Mahima A

Squishy Science: Extract DNA from Smashed Strawberries: Scientific American - 2 views

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    what media type is this?
Inga V.

Animal Cloning - 0 views

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    Is this a report? Or a blog or an article? Its not very clear.
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    Hey Inga,can you change your tagging? just add what media it is,your name,and put animal cloning together. It seems like a good website :)
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    Hi Ms. Vora, This was supposed to be a link that I had to delete but since people have already commented on this I can no longer delete this link. So now I just kept it as an information link or a different science article but just please look at the other four. Thanks
Kareena M

Forensic News Blog - 3 views

  • In 2012, readers searching for forensic science content now have many more ways to find
  • "The body chemistry of the person who left the fingerprint can tell us some things," said Shaler. "If the suspect is older or younger or a lactating mother, for example."The researchers used a form of physical vapor deposition -- a method that uses a vacuum and allows vaporized materials to condense on a surface creating a thin film. Normally, the deposition process requires exceptionally clean surfaces because any speck of dust or grease on the coated surface shows up as a deformity. However, with fingerprints, the point is to have the surface material's ridges and valleys -- topography -- show up on the new surface so analysts can read them using an optical device without the necessity of chemical development or microscopy."This approach allows us to look at the topography better and to look at the chemistry later," said Shaler. "We wouldn't have thought of this by ourselves, but we could do it together."One benefit of this approach would be the ability to retrieve fingerprints off fragments from incendiary or explosive devices and still be able to analyze the chemicals used in the device.The specific method used is a conformal-evaporated-film-by-rotation technique developed to create highly accurate copies of biological templates such as insect eyes or butterfly wings. Both are surfaces that have nanoscale variations."It is a very simple process," said Lakhtakia. "And fingerprints are not nanoscale objects, so the conformal coating is applied to something big by nanotechnology standards."
  • Investigators have found new DNA evidence in the murder of Peggy Hettrick, a case that was considered closed until genetic evidence freed a man who spent 10 years in prison, according to Colorado Attorney General John Suthers.The "touch DNA" tests weren't available in the late 1990s. Timothy Masters was convicted of murder in Hettrick's death in 1999, but his conviction was overturned in 2008 after defense lawyers used advanced DNA testing to uncover evidence suggesting a different suspect.The new evidence was taken from Hettrick's clothing. "We have done 'touch DNA,' and I think it has moved the ball forward. We will know more in the future," Suthers said. He wouldn't say whose DNA was found or identify the clothing on which it was found.Masters has not been exonerated in the case and remains a suspect."While we are not in a position to exonerate Tim at this time, I emphasize that he is presumed innocent and is no more a suspect than a variety of other people," Suthers said.
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  • It's already difficult to obtain good fingerprints at a crime scene. In most cases, mostly partials will be found. In cases where there was some type of explosion or fire, other methods like this chemical method could be very helpful not just in recovering the print but also to find out some information on who the suspect could be.
  • relevant material.  Organized blogs devoted to forensic science have appeared that post both links and original content.  Organizations have twitter accounts and Facebook pages that make reaching readers much easier than in RSS days.
  • As you may know, your skin has "normal flora" bacteria living on it. This bacteria is beneficial to your health, but may also be used to identify you, according to emerging research. Scientists at the University of Colorado at Boulder are developing a method to identify individuals based on the unique bacteria found on their hands. When the amount of human DNA is too small to detect, bacterial DNA could be used in its place. Bacteria can be collected directly from hands or even touched surfaces and the DNA can be sequenced just like human DNA. The scientists found that very few bacteria were shared among test subjects. Even identical twins have different colonies of bacteria on their hands! Bacteria remain on our hands no matter how many times we wash them, so why not use them?
  • ..."Each one of us leaves a unique trail of bugs behind as we travel through our daily lives," said Fierer, an assistant professor in CU-Boulder's ecology and evolutionary biology department.....unless there is blood, tissue, semen or saliva on an object, it's often difficult to obtain sufficient human DNA for forensic identification, said Fierer. But given the abundance of bacterial cells on the skin surface, it may be easier to recover bacterial DNA than human DNA from touched surfaces, they said. "Our technique could provide another independent line of evidence."...The new technique would even be useful for identifying objects touched by identical twins, since they share identical DNA but they have different bacterial communities on their hands.
  • "On Wednesday, Human Rights Watch released a report showing that since 1995, only about 20 percent of rape kits, which contain physical evidence obtained from victims, could be confirmed as having been tested in Illinois. More than 4,000 kits had gone untested, the report found."
  • Law-enforcement experts said iPhone technology records a wealth of information that can be tapped more easily than BlackBerry and Droid devices to help police learn where you've been, what you were doing there and whether you've got something to hide.
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    okay but which exact post do you want me to read?
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    "New DNA Evidence May Exonerate Convicted Murderer"
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    not a very strong, relevant post
Alisa H

Nature or nurture? It may depend on where you live - 0 views

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    Whats the media type? Your tags are incomplete. Also this is not a science article. If you can find the actual twins study that would qualify as a science article
Kareena M

BBC News - DNA crime-fighting in UK 'lagging behind', experts say - 0 views

  • Cross-border co-operation on terrorism and crime will be compromised unless the UK updates the technology it uses for DNA profiling, experts have warned.
  • Using EU recommended markers Not using recommended markers Dat
  • Experts also say that the "chemistry" that underlies DNA testing kits used by UK forensic science labs is now more than a decade old and that newer, more sensitive systems can obtain results from even low quality samples - improving success rates. Some argue that such information can potentially make or break a case.
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  • UK experts fear that proposals to destroy so-called "second swab" DNA samples could slow down investigations if and when the UK moves over to new markers and chemistries. Currently, when a DNA sample is obtained from a suspect, a first swab is used to generate a profile in the NDNAD and a second sample is placed into storage. Problems could arise when there was a partial match between a crime scene stain processed using the new markers and an old profile in the database generated using six or 10 markers. Up until now, it would have been possible to re-process the DNA from the second swab, allowing investigators to confirm or deny a match using a comparison based on all the new loci. But soon, that will no longer be an option.
woojin kim

EBSCOhost: DNA fingerprinting using PCR: a practical forensic science activity. - 1 views

Romy Kedem

Genetically engineering 'ethical' babies is a moral obligation, says Oxford professor -... - 0 views

  • Professor Julian Savulescu said that creating so-called designer babies could be considered a "moral obligation" as it makes them grow up into "ethically better children". The expert in practical ethics said that we should actively give parents the choice to screen out personality flaws in their children as it meant they were then less likely to "harm themselves and others". The academic, who is also editor-in-chief of the Journal of Medical Ethics, made his comments in an article in the latest edition of Reader's Digest. He explained that we are now in the middle of a genetic revolution and that although screening, for all but a few conditions, remained illegal it should be welcomed.
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    This is not a cutting edge technique
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