A fleece from Dolly the sheep has been donated to National Museums Scotland.
The fleece, which recently appeared on the Antiques Roadshow, has been donated by Dr William A. Ritchie, the embryologist on the Roslin Institute team that created Dolly, the world’s first cloned mammal.
Equipment, including sharpened glass pipettes and an electrical fusion machine have also been given to the museum.
Dolly’s fleece and the lab equipment were valued at between £20,000 and £30,000 when they appeared on a recent episode of the Antiques Roadshow.
Following a five-day quarantine in the National Museums Collection Centre freezer, the fleece has joined a range of material associated with Dolly, including her skeleton, death mask and fellow cloned sheep Morag and Megan.
‘When Dolly the sheep was introduced to the world the scientific community went wild,’ Dr William A. Ritchie said.
‘The impossible had been achieved, and to make the story even more remarkable, some of the equipment used to produce this breakthrough was handmade in the Roslin institute’s workshop just outside Edinburgh.
‘It is only fitting that the equipment and the fleece are reunited with Dolly in Scotland’s National Collections to add to the story of this extraordinary scientific achievement.’
Dolly the Sheep was born in 1996 at the Roslin Institute just outside Edinburgh. Her birth captured the public imagination and transformed scientific understanding of biology and medicine.
Inspired by the adult mammary gland cell used to create her, Dolly was named after Dolly Parton, the country and western singer.
She spent her entire life in Roslin where she gave birth to six healthy lambs and died in 2003 aged six.
Preserved on a custom-built fibre glass frame, Dolly has been on display at the National Museum of Scotland for almost 20 years and remains one of the museum’s most popular exhibits.
‘We are delighted to add Dolly’s fleece and these remarkable instruments to the National Collections, thanks to the generosity of Dr William A. Ritchie.’
‘Dolly the Sheep represents one of the most important scientific advances of the 20th century.
‘Her fleece will now be available to researchers ensuring Dolly’s contribution to science continues for generations to come,’ said Sophie Goggins, senior curator of biomedical science at National Museums Scotland.
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