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  2. Santa Clones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Clones

    Santa Clones is an annual Christmas display by Chris Willis in Portland, Oregon, United States. [1] The display featured hundreds of Santa Claus statues and the location is different each year. Willis started the project in the early 2010s and the size of his collection of statues has grown over time.

  3. Category:Statues in Portland, Oregon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Statues_in...

    Santa Clones; The Scout (Portland, Oregon) Shemanski Fountain; Spanish–American War Soldier's Monument; Spanish–American War Veterans Memorial; Statue of Abraham Lincoln (Portland, Oregon) Statue of Benjamin Franklin (Portland, Oregon) Statue of George Washington (Portland, Oregon) Statue of Harvey W. Scott; Statue of Paul Bunyan (Portland ...

  4. Commercial animal cloning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commercial_animal_cloning

    The US Food and Drug Administration has concluded that "Food from cattle, swine, and goat clones is as safe to eat as food from any other cattle, swine, or goat." [1] It has also been noted that the main use of agricultural clones is to produce breeding stock, not food. Clones allow farmers to upgrade the overall quality of their herds by ...

  5. City Liquidators - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_Liquidators

    The store's interior, 2016. City Liquidators is a furniture warehouse in the Buckman neighborhood of Portland, Oregon.It was established in 1977 by Walt Pelett, who still owns the company along with his wife, Pam. [1] The company occupies seven buildings totaling 390,000-square feet.

  6. List of cloned animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cloned_animals

    In 2010, the first lived equine clone of a Criollo horse was born in Argentina and was the first horse clone produced in Latin America. [51] In the same year a cloned polo horse was sold for $800,000 – the highest known price ever paid for a polo horse.

  7. Horse cloning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_cloning

    The birth of three cloned mules in the United States on May 4, 2003, came just before that of the first horse. [10] The first successful attempt to produce a viable clone was made by the Italian laboratory LTR-CIZ, which gave birth to Prometea on May 28, 2003, a Haflinger foal carried to term by her mother, whose genetic copy she is. [9]

  8. Bone Clones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone_Clones

    Bone Clones, Inc. manufactures, distributes, and sells osteological reproductions of human and animal bones. Located in Chatsworth, California , Bone Clones provides these reproductions to museums, universities , medical schools , and other educational institutions.

  9. Digital cloning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_cloning

    Truby and Brown coined the term “digital thought clone” to refer to the evolution of digital cloning into a more advanced personalized digital clone that consists of “a replica of all known data and behavior on a specific living person, recording in real-time their choices, preferences, behavioral trends, and decision making processes.” [3]