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Keyword: ancestry

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  • Native American Populations Share Gene Signature

    02/14/2007 10:58:14 AM PST · by blam · 43 replies · 1,281+ views
    New Scientist ^ | 2-14-2007 | Roxanne Khamsi
    Native American populations share gene signature 00:01 14 February 2007 NewScientist.com news service Roxanne Khamsi A distinctive, repeating sequence of DNA found in people living at the eastern edge of Russia is also widespread among Native Americans, according to a new study. The finding lends support to the idea that Native Americans descended from a common founding population that lived near the Bering land bridge for some time. Kari Schroeder at the University of California in Davis, US, and colleagues sampled the genes from various populations around the globe, including two at the eastern edge of Siberia, 53 elsewhere in...
  • Curious About Your Genealogical Origins? UA Can Help Trace Them

    01/02/2007 9:54:46 PM PST · by blam · 44 replies · 1,523+ views
    Arizona Daily Star ^ | 12-26-2006 | Dan Sorenson
    Curious about your genealogical origins? UA can help trace them By Dan Sorenson arizona daily star Tucson, Arizona | Published: 12.26.2006 Human history is unfolding one cheek swab at a time in a cluttered, windowless laboratory deep in the University of Arizona's Biological Sciences West Building. Although geneticists and anthropologists long ago determined that we all have origins in Africa, there is much to be learned from our DNA about where we went from there. A cast of about 30 undergraduate UA biology students, technicians and the lab manager deftly dance around one another in the cramped space, like waiters...
  • Yorkshire clan linked to Africa

    01/24/2007 3:19:12 AM PST · by Jedi Master Pikachu · 10 replies · 736+ views
    BBC ^ | Wednesday, January 24, 2007
    People of African origin have lived in Britain for centuries, according to genetic evidence. A Leicester University study found that seven men with a rare Yorkshire surname carry a genetic signature previously found only in people of African origin. The men seem to have shared a common ancestor in the 18th Century, but the African DNA lineage they carry may have reached Britain centuries earlier. The connection was found to date back many generations Details of the study appear in the European Journal of Human Genetics. The scientists declined to disclose the men's surname in order to protect their...
  • Historic passenger lists of ships go online

    01/10/2007 5:42:42 AM PST · by 7thson · 46 replies · 1,336+ views
    Yahoo!News ^ | Tue Jan 9, 7:11 PM ET | Matthew Jones
    LONDON (Reuters) - People looking to track ancestors who emigrated from British ports will from Wednesday be able to search online passenger lists of the ships that carried them to new lands. Released by Britain's National Archives, the passenger manifests give an insight into all long-distance trips made by 30 million travelers from the country's ports between 1890 and 1960, including that of the Titanic which sank in 1912.
  • Seeking Ancestry in DNA Ties Uncovered by Tests

    04/12/2006 3:07:14 AM PDT · by Pharmboy · 39 replies · 1,220+ views
    NY Times ^ | April 12, 2006 | AMY HARMON
    Alan Moldawer's adopted twins, Matt and Andrew, had always thought of themselves as white. But when it came time for them to apply to college last year, Mr. Moldawer thought it might be worth investigating the origins of their slightly tan-tinted skin, with a new DNA kit that he had heard could determine an individual's genetic ancestry. The results, designating the boys 9 percent Native American and 11 percent northern African, arrived too late for the admissions process. But Mr. Moldawer, a business executive in Silver Spring, Md., says they could be useful in obtaining financial aid. "Naturally when you're...
  • The Great DNA Hunt (Genetic archaeology)

    02/25/2006 9:58:16 PM PST · by restornu · 22 replies · 873+ views
    Archaeological Institute of America ^ | Volume 49 Number 5, September/October 1996 | by Tabitha M. Powledge and Mark Rose
    DNA can be used to understand the evolution of modern humans, trace migrations of people, identify individuals, and determine the origins of domestic plants and animals. DNA analysis, as one scholar put it, is "the greatest archaeological excavation of all time." Because ancient DNA molecules are normally so few and fragmented, and preserved soft tissues so rare, scientists had little hope of finding and analyzing it. But two breakthroughs have made this possible: the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), a method for copying any fragment of DNA, and the successful recovery of DNA from preserved hard tissues, bones and teeth, that...
  • Personal qus: British/Irish ancestry among Americans, Canadians, and Australians?

    02/23/2006 2:44:29 PM PST · by NZerFromHK · 65 replies · 1,006+ views
    24 February 2006 | NZerFromHK
    Does anyone have a summary of what proportions of Americans with British and Irish ancestry? I'm currently looking at the data for New Zealand and I note that in the 2001 Census, it was recorded 75% of all New Zealanders have majority British/Irish ancestry, and 5% have European ancestry from outside Britain and/or Ireland. Maori comprises 14.7% and Pacific Islanders 6.5%. The definition of British/Irish ancestry that I use is: anyone who has 50% or more ancestral blood who came from what we call the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland today. In addition, does anyone have a comparable...
  • European Faces Reflect Stone Age Ancestry, Study Says

    02/14/2006 3:31:25 PM PST · by blam · 60 replies · 1,283+ views
    National Geographic ^ | 12-20-2005 | James Owens
    European Faces Reflect Stone Age Ancestry, Study Says James Owen for National Geographic News December 20, 2005Europeans inherit their looks from Stone Age hunters, new research suggests. Scientists studied ancient skeletons from Scandinavia to North Africa and Greece, comparing ancient and modern facial features. Their analysis suggests modern Europeans are closely related and descended from prehistoric indigenous peoples. Later Neolithic settlers—notably immigrants who introduced farming from the Near East some 7,500 years ago—contributed little to how Europeans look today, the researchers add. The scientists described their findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Online Early Edition. The...
  • Americanism by Franklin D. Roosevelt

    02/08/2006 11:30:43 PM PST · by Exton1 · 9 replies · 526+ views
    Absolute astronomy ^ | 1940's | Franklin D. Roosevelt.
    "No loyal citizen of the United States should be denied the democratic right to exercise the responsibilities of his citizenship, regardless of his ancestry. The principle on which this country was founded and by which it has always been governed is that Americanism is a matter of the mind and heart; Americanism is not, and never was, a matter of race or ancestry."
  • Find Your Paternal-Line Relatives With Y-Chromosome Matches On Line

    12/30/2005 4:07:34 AM PST · by Pharmboy · 43 replies · 667+ views
    If you know your Y-chromosome markers, enter them in the spaces provided in the drop-down menus and it will trace paternal line names and likely countries of origin. Three names popped up in my likely ancestry: Nickle (USA and Scotland), Rogers (USA) and Mahoney (USA). Here is my Place/Time Analysis: Important notes: A match close to 100% for a given time period does not necessarily mean that your paternal-line ancestor lived in that country at that time, only that the closest match in the SMGF database had a paternal-line ancestor living in that place and time. In general, the above...
  • Statistics About Arab Descendants in the USA

    12/04/2005 10:24:15 AM PST · by Dont_Tread_On_Me_888 · 81 replies · 1,544+ views
    The United States population of those who identify themselves as from Arab ancestry rose a huge 40% since 1980. Median income for Arab-American households is $5,000 greater than the national average. Mean income is 8% higher than the national average. More than 40% of US citizens of Arab descent have a bachelor's degree or higher versus 24% for the US national average. The percent of those with a post-graduate degree is nearly 100% greater than the national average. The median age of the Arab population was 33, and ranged from 27 for those who said their ancestry was "Arab" or...
  • Why You Need To Know The Scots-Irish

    10/03/2004 10:04:28 AM PDT · by LNewman · 213 replies · 3,745+ views
    Parade Magazine ^ | October 3, 2004 | James Webb
    One of the most powerful cultural forces shaping America, they've produced great Presidents, soldiers, inventors, actors and writers. But, as a group, they've remained unvisible. The time has come to change that, says the author. snip ... The Scots-Irish are a fiercely independent, individualist people. It goes against their grain to think collectively. But, as America rushes forward into yet another redefinition of itself, the contributions of the Scots-Irish are too great to remain invisible. My culture needs to reclaim itself-stop letting others define, mock and even use it-and is so doing regain its power to shape the direction of...
  • New four-winged feathered dinosaur?

    01/28/2003 1:54:40 PM PST · by ZGuy · 18 replies · 1,528+ views
    AIG ^ | 1/28/03 | Jonathan Sarfati
    Papers have been flapping with new headlines about the latest in a long line of alleged dinosaur ancestors of birds. This one is claimed to be a sensational dinosaur with feathers on its hind legs, thus four ‘wings’.1 This was named Microraptor gui—the name is derived from words meaning ‘little plunderer of Gu’ after the paleontologist Gu Zhiwei. Like so many of the alleged feathered dinosaurs, it comes from Liaoning province of northeastern China. It was about 3 feet (1 meter) long from its head to the tip of its long tail, but its body was only about the size...
  • DNA Study Traces Ancient Ancestry Of Europeans

    02/22/2004 5:00:24 PM PST · by blam · 89 replies · 366+ views
    CNN.com ^ | 11-10-2000
    <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -- Four out of five men in Europe share a common male ancestor who lived as a hunter on a wild continent some 40,000 years ago, researchers say.</p> <p>In a study appearing Friday in the journal Science, researchers say an analysis of a pattern found in the Y chromosome taken from 1,007 men from 25 places in Europe shows that about 80 percent of Europeans arose from the Paleolithic people who first migrated to Europe.</p>
  • DNA helps unscramble the puzzles of ancestry

    08/03/2003 5:43:41 PM PDT · by farmfriend · 35 replies · 711+ views
    Sacramento Bee ^ | August 3, 2003 | Stephen Magagnini
    <p>Almost from the time he was old enough to read the "whites only" signs on department stores in Montgomery, Ala., Ulysses Moore has been on a quest. Where did I come from? he wondered.</p> <p>He knew he was more than just a "colored" child of the segregated South, that his legacy extended beyond the slave ships that brought 12 million Africans across the Atlantic. Was he descended from Shaka Zulu or the great Mandinka warriors, or the builders of the ancient world's greatest library in Egypt?</p>
  • Family Tree: Teaching Children Their Heritage (Parenting Week)

    06/18/2003 5:59:13 AM PDT · by RockBassCreek · 9 replies · 594+ views
    ABCNews.com ^ | Jun 13
    And that leads Good Morning America's parenting contributor Ann Pleshette Murphy to her second Murphy's Law: Thou Shalt Give Them Roots. Albert Dehart Washington III, who also goes by DD Washington, is learning from Albert Dehart Washington I, a grandfather who is wisely following Murphy's edict. Freed Slave Gave Family Name "My family originated in Dinwoodie County in Virginia and we can trace the family back to 1808," Washington told his grandson. "My great-great grandfather? Well, he was a slave, and he changed his name to Washington after he was freed." Connecting with their family's past not only helps children...
  • Fewer Americans Remember Ancestry

    06/07/2002 5:45:23 PM PDT · by GeneD · 13 replies · 263+ views
    wire.ap.org ^ | 6/7/02 | Genaro C. Armas
    WASHINGTON (AP) — The nation of immigrants is again reshaping its identity. While Hispanic immigration surged in the 1990s, new census figures show a decline in the number of people identifying themselves as Irish, German and other European ancestries. More people are simply calling themselves ``American.'' ``When I was younger, my parents explained that you are an American citizen but your heritage was from Ireland,'' said Jim Donohue, a New York City investment banker who has dual citizenship. Some of Donohue's ancestors came to America as early as the 1860s. While he has grown closer to his Irish roots in...