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Keyword: genealogy

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  • You Won't Believe What Country Will Overtake China in Population ( No, Not Just India )

    02/12/2024 9:46:27 PM PST · by SeekAndFind · 92 replies
    PJ Media ^ | 02/12/2024 | Stephen Green
    The depopulation bomb imploding in China is more powerful than ever according to shocking new figures just published by Australia's Victoria University in Melbourne. It just seems like last month [It was just last month, Steve — editor] that I reported for you that Chinese women seemed to be voting against strongman Xi Jinping's return to True Communism™ with the only means available to them — their uteri. Live births were down in 2023 by another 500,000 under 2022's dismal figure. That puts the People's Republic fertility rate nearly at 1.0, or about half of the 2.1 required just to...
  • ‘The View’ Airhead Sunny Hostin Shocked to Discover Her Family’s Terrible Secret-When your fantasy of being personally untouched by original sin hits a brick wall

    02/13/2024 6:11:10 AM PST · by SJackson · 28 replies
    Frontpagemagazine ^ | February 13, 2024 | Robert Spencer
    In the left’s mythology, there are white people and “people of color.” White people are bad; “people of color” are good. Racism is bad unless you’re mocking, stereotyping, and discriminating against white people, which is simply redress for centuries of white supremacy. White people are always oppressors in every case, and “people of color” are always noble victims. One of the hosts of the cringefest known as “The View,” however, got a rude awakening Tuesday, in the form of a reminder that reality is not really that simple. Fox News reported Thursday that Sunny Hostin, one of the far-left harridans...
  • 'View' host Sunny Hostin stunned to learn her ancestor was a slaveholder: 'That's disappointing'

    02/08/2024 10:25:23 AM PST · by DallasBiff · 57 replies
    Fox News ^ | 2/8/24 | Kristine Parks
    "The View" host Sunny Hostin was shocked to discover her family's hidden history in a new episode of the PBS documentary show, "Finding Your Roots." The documentary show researches prominent figures' family histories through historical records and DNA testing. On the February 6 episode, show host Henry Louis Gates Jr. revealed one of Hostin's ancestors on her maternal side was likely involved in the slave trade in colonial Spain. Her third great-grandfather also "owned at least one human being," he said.
  • Scientists warn: Declining academic standards mixed with DEI recipe for disaster

    02/04/2024 3:57:56 PM PST · by george76 · 46 replies
    College Fix ^ | FEBRUARY 1, 2024 | DANIEL NUCCIO
    The continued embrace of diversity, equity and inclusion in STEM combined with a broad decline in academic standards is producing a generation of scientists who are less capable than their predecessors, warned some scientists in recent interviews with The College Fix. From easier math classes in high school to the elimination of standardized tests to extreme grade-inflation to DEI tropes that elevate lived experiences and ways of knowing over facts and data, the trend represents a pressing problem for science professors working to protect STEM and preserve its standards and meritocracy. Alex Small, chair of the physics and astronomy department...
  • FUGITIVE RIDDLE Man on deathbed tells cops he’s one of Japan’s most wanted men and was on run for 50 YEARS… but dies before proving it

    02/03/2024 11:04:04 AM PST · by DallasBiff · 20 replies
    The Sun ^ | 2/3/24 | Ellie Doughty
    A 70-YEAR-OLD man revealed to cops on his deathbed that he was one of Japan's most wanted fugitives before he died. The man claimed to be Satoshi Kirishima, a radical extremist behind bombings in the capital who had been on the run for 49 years.
  • First prehistoric person with Turner syndrome identified from ancient DNA

    01/25/2024 9:13:31 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 14 replies
    Phys dot org ^ | The Francis Crick Institute
    As part of their research published in Communications Biology, they also identified the earliest known person with Jacob's syndrome (characterized by an extra Y chromosome—XYY) in the Early Medieval Period, three people with Klinefelter syndrome (characterized by an extra X chromosome—XXY) across a range of time periods, and an infant with Down Syndrome from the Iron Age.Most cells in the human body have 23 pairs of DNA molecules called chromosomes, and the sex chromosomes are typically XX (female) or XY (male), although there are differences in sexual development. Aneuploidy occurs when a person's cells have an extra or missing chromosome....
  • Remains of ‘Bones 20,’ the last known victim of serial strangler Green River Killer, ID’d

    01/23/2024 10:40:34 AM PST · by ChicagoConservative27 · 22 replies
    NY Post ^ | 01/23/2024 | Olivia Land
    The remains of the last known victim of the Green River Killer have been identified as a Washington State teen – though investigators say there may still be other unsolved cases linked to the infamous murderer. The partial remains were identified as belonging to Tammie Liles, of Everett, the King’s County Sheriff’s Office (KCSO) announced. “With this identification, there are no other unidentified remains associated with the Green River Case,” the sheriff’s office said. The incomplete set of bones and teeth were first discovered in 2003, when serial killer Gary Ridgway – known as the Green River Killer – led...
  • A family’s journey finally ends thanks to new DNA technology

    04/08/2007 4:54:43 AM PDT · by csvset · 6 replies · 751+ views
    Virginian Pilot ^ | April 8, 2007 | EARL SWIFT
    Pete Mongilardi’s wife, Patricia Perrine, comforts their daughter, Julie Sims, as they talk about the man they lost more than 40 years ago. Bill Tiernan/The Virginian-Pilot The bones were broken and weathered, their edges softened by three decades of tropical rain: four pieces, the largest about 3 inches, tip to tip. They were mixed in the silty loam of a Vietnamese hillside with the wreckage of a Navy jet. Most of the debris had been dragged off by scavengers, but what remained included pieces of belt, parachute and boot sole. The pilot had not ejected.A team sifting through the...
  • LeVar Burton discovers he’s descended from Confederate soldier: ‘There’s some conflict roiling inside of me’

    01/18/2024 8:42:01 PM PST · by Mafe · 149 replies
    LA Times ^ | January 17, 2024 | Emily St. Martin
    LeVar Burton got a glimpse into his lineage in “Finding Your Roots” and discovered something about his ancestors that shocked him. The former “Reading Rainbow” host, freedom-to-read advocate and actor knew little about his lineage. He’d been estranged from his father, Levardis Robert Martyn Burton, since he was 11, and his mother, Erma Gene Christian, had been tight-lipped about her own history. Burton said it was “impossible” to get her to open-up about her upbringing.
  • Ancient DNA reveals origins of multiple sclerosis in Europe

    01/13/2024 4:26:21 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 9 replies
    Nature ^ | January, 10 2024 | Sara Reardon
    ...The genomes suggest that many characteristics — including a heightened risk for multiple sclerosis — were carried to Europe by people who migrated to the continent in three distinct waves starting around 45,000 years ago...The findings provide evidence that some of the regional variation in certain traits was caused by differences in migrants' dispersal patterns. That contradicts the idea that genetic differences arose mainly as people adapted to conditions in specific locations in Europe...Europe was settled by anatomically modern humans in three main waves: hunter-gatherers reached Europe from Asia around 45,000 years ago; farmers arrived from the Middle East 11,000...
  • DNA Study Finds Ancient Egyptians Were European, Not African

    01/10/2024 12:34:01 PM PST · by Jan_Sobieski · 66 replies
    The People’s Voice ^ | 01/18/2018 | Sean Adl-Tabatabai
    Scientists analysing ancient DNA from Egyptian mummies have discovered they overwhelmingly share genes with people from Europe and not Africa, as previously believed. The first ever full-genome study of mummies dating from 1400 BC to 400 AD found that the ancient Egyptians were closely related to populations in the Levant – now modern day Turkey, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Israel.Daily Mail reports: They were also genetically similar to Neolithic populations from the Anatolian Peninsula and Europe. In plain English, Egyptians were related to Persians, Rome and Greece whom were all white European people.The groundbreaking study used recent advances in DNA...
  • Britain's Prince Harry had blood test to prove Charles was father: newspaper

    06/28/2005 4:41:31 PM PDT · by RWR8189 · 50 replies · 31,052+ views
    Agence France-Presse ^ | June 28, 2005
    LONDON (AFP) - Britain's royal family forced the late Princess Diana to blood test her younger son, Prince Harry, to prove he was not the offspring of an affair with an army officer, according to a newspaper report. Diana, who died in 1997, did not tell Harry why his blood was being taken, the Sun newspaper said in extracts from a book by Simone Simmons, an "energy healer" billed as a former close friend and confidante of the princess. Senior royals, notably Queen Elizabeth's husband Prince Philip, feared that their son, Prince Charles, who was married to Diana, might not...
  • The Most Mysterious Cells in Our Bodies Don’t Belong to Us

    01/05/2024 1:17:11 PM PST · by Red Badger · 54 replies
    www.theatlantic.com ^ | JANUARY 3, 2024 | By Katherine J. Wu
    Some 24 years ago, Diana Bianchi peered into a microscope at a piece of human thyroid and saw something that instantly gave her goosebumps. The sample had come from a woman who was chromosomally XX. But through the lens, Bianchi saw the unmistakable glimmer of Y chromosomes—dozens and dozens of them. “Clearly,” Bianchi told me, “part of her thyroid was entirely male.” The reason, Bianchi suspected, was pregnancy. Years ago, the patient had carried a male embryo, whose cells had at some point wandered out of the womb. They’d ended up in his mother’s thyroid—and, almost certainly, a bunch of...
  • Revealing close and distant relatives in ancient DNA with unprecedented precision

    01/03/2024 10:24:01 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 17 replies
    Phys dot org ^ | December 20, 2023 | Max Planck Society
    If two persons are biologically related, they share long stretches of DNA that they co-inherited from their recent common ancestor. These almost identically shared stretches of genomes are called IBD ("Identity by Descent") segments. Up to the sixth-degree relatives—such as second to third cousins would be, or a great great great great grandparent—the two relatives even share multiple IBD segments. Personal genomics companies such as 23andme or Ancestry detect those segments routinely in DNA of their customers, and use this signal to distinctively reveal biological relatives in their databases.In a new study published in Nature Genetics, researchers from the Max...
  • Body Found Wrapped in Tire Chains in Kentucky Lake 24 Years Ago Identified as Man Wanted by FBI

    12/19/2023 4:11:38 PM PST · by CFW · 33 replies
    Breaking 911 ^ | 12/19/23 | staff
    LOUISVILLE (KSP / News Release) – Kentucky State Police (KSP) Post 1 in Mayfield has positively identified remains found nearly 25 years ago thanks to the help of advanced DNA technology. On May 6, 1999, human remains were discovered in Lake Barkley, Lyon County, Kentucky, by two fishermen. The individual was located wrapped in heavy tire chains and anchored with a hydraulic jack. At the time, investigators were unable to identify the male using traditional investigative techniques. In 2016, the body of the victim was exhumed in hopes that further examinations would help make an identification. Despite extensive efforts using...
  • Are You a Morning Person? You Might Want to Thank Your Neanderthal Genes

    12/14/2023 9:00:51 AM PST · by billorites · 28 replies
    Wall Street Journal ^ | December 14. 2023 | Aylin Woodward
    Whether you’re a morning person has long been tied to personality, but new research suggests DNA inherited from our extinct Neanderthal cousins ups the chance we’re early risers. Our circadian rhythms—the biological clocks inside our cells that time when we sleep and wake—are linked to countless genes. Now researchers say they have found that bits of genetic code passed down to some of us from Neanderthals relate to our sleeping habits in the present day. The study was published Thursday in the journal Genome Biology and Evolution. “We’ve found many Neanderthal variants that consistently associate with a propensity for being...
  • A World War 2 Soldier Was Found Frozen in Ice! | Secrets In the Ice [8:54]

    12/13/2023 11:05:15 PM PST · by SunkenCiv · 21 replies
    YouTube ^ | April 20, 2023 | Science Channel
    In 2005, a group of ice climbers stumbled upon a frozen body buried in the ice. The body wore military clothes, making experts wonder if the soldier was on a secret mission at his demise.A World War 2 Soldier Was Found Frozen in Ice! | Secrets In the Ice | 8:54Science Channel | 4.64M subscribers | 3,249,007 views | April 20, 2023
  • Woman whose body was found 35 years ago in a suitcase in a Georgia dumpster is identified

    11/28/2023 9:18:35 AM PST · by Red Badger · 24 replies
    NBC News ^ | Oct. 24, 2023, 9:26 AM CDT | Staff
    A Texas company was able to build a DNA profile using genetic material from a blanket found with the body, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ MILLEN, Ga. — A body found wrapped in plastic inside a Georgia dumpster 35 years ago has been identified as that of a South Korean woman, officials announced Monday. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said they used DNA analysis, paid for by donors, to determine that Chong Un Kim, 26, was the person whose body was discovered in rural Millen in February 1988. Kim died from asphyxiation, but it’s unclear whether someone killed...
  • Remains of a WWII heavy bomber gunner identified nearly 80 years after his death

    11/27/2023 10:10:15 PM PST · by Kartographer · 9 replies
    AP ^ | Updated 2:51 PM CST, November 27, 2023
    A U.S. Army Air Force gunner’s remains have been accounted for nearly eight decades after the heavy bomber he was flying in was shot down over France during World War II, military officials said Monday. Staff Sgt. Franklin P. Hall, 21, of Leesburg, Florida, was identified in July by scientists who used anthropological and DNA analysis, the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency said in a news release.
  • US identifies remains of WW2 tank commander killed in 1944

    11/27/2023 10:23:14 PM PST · by Kartographer · 6 replies
    The US says it has identified the remains of a World War Two tank commander who was killed fighting in Germany in November 1944. Lt Gene F Walker was battling Nazi forces near the German-Belgian border when his M4 Sherman was struck by an anti-tank round. His crew escaped the blast, but were prevented from recovering his body by heavy fighting.