On this day in 2003
Dolly the cloned sheep dies
Dolly the sheep was a scientific marvel, being the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. However, she wasn’t the first mammal created through cloning in history: that honour went to another sheep that was cloned from an embryo cell almost 20 years earlier.

Dolly was cloned at the Roslin Institute, which is part of the University of Edinburgh and her existence was announced to the world in February 1997. By that point she was around seven years old. She had started out as a single cell taken from the udder of an adult Finn Dorset sheep, which was combined in the laboratory with an unfertilised egg, and implanted in a surrogate mother to develop.
Born older than she was
The result, Dolly, was genetically identical to the sheep from which the original udder cell had been extracted – and that included her age. Sample analysis performed one year later showed that Dolly was biologically older than her chronological existence would suggest, with her DNA resembling that of a much older animal. By 2001 she had developed arthritis, and scans performed two years later revealed tumours in her lungs. She was euthanised on 14 February 2003 and her body donated to the National Museum of Scotland. She had given birth to six lambs during her lifetime.
By the time of her death, Dolly was just one mammal among many to have been cloned using cells taken from an adult, and scientists were already warning against cloning humans who, they said, would likewise suffer an early death.
Yesterday…
Engineer and bridge builder William Arrol is born
Willian Arrol worked on the construction of the Forth Bridge and second Tay Bridge, and appears on a Scottish £5 note.
The first king of Scotland dies at Cinnbelachoir
Kenneth MacAlpin reigned from around 843 until his death in 858 and was buried in his birthplace of Iona.
Government forces blocked the northern exit from Glencoe, then sent in troops to kill Jacobite supporters, leaving around 40 dead.
Tomorrow…
The father of acid rain is born
Angus Smith was a doctor of chemistry and researched the effects of air pollution on populations in built-up areas.