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Genetic Tracking

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posted on Feb, 23 2006 @ 01:51 PM
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I think the best bet we have for possibly turning up a lost global superculture will be to get a good genetic profile of as many groups of people as possible, and see which groups might have common unknown ancestors or traces of other subgroups floating around in their tribal mix.

Could be very interesting.



posted on Feb, 23 2006 @ 02:38 PM
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National Geographic does not seem to be doing this to find a "lost global superculture" but it seems to be close to what your talking about... trace the human journey (your ancestors) using DNA from where they started.

The Genographic Project

It's a hundred dollars to participate...



posted on Feb, 23 2006 @ 03:43 PM
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These links might be helpfull:


www.people.virginia.edu...

Genetics: An Evolutionary Mate for 'Eve"? by Boyce Rensberger


About 10 years ago, molecular biologists found evidence in human genes that all people share a common female ancestor, dubbed Eve, who lived in Africa about 200,000 years ago. The claim has been challenged on both genetic and fossil evidence, and it has been supported by a repetition of the same kind of analysis. There is an argument that one would expect all current humans to have one common ancestor based on sampling statistics alone.

..snip...

Michael F. Hammer, a researcher in molecular evolution at the University of Arizona in Tucson, reported in the Nov. 23 Nature that his analysis of a part of the Y sex chromosome indicates that modern humans descended from a common male ancestor who lived 188,000 years ago. Although the new report does not say where that ancient man, whom some are calling 'Adam,' lived, his age is close enough to Eve's for this kind of work.

Both analyses are based on counting mutations that distinguish a portion of one modern person's DNA from that of others and using a "molecular clock" that assumes the mutations arise at a known, constant rate.

...snip...

Others, however, dispute the genetic evidence and argue that modern people evolved in many parts of the world as products both of the people already living there and of immigrants.

There is evidence for this contrary view in fossils. In 1992, for exmple, researchers found skulls in China that appeared to blend traits of Homo sapiens and the ancestral species, Homo erectus. The skulls are from hominids who lived nearly 400,000 years ago, suggesting the transition was happening long before "Adam' or "Eve' could have lived.

Confidence in genetic approaches to this problem should also be tempered by a second report in the Nov. 23 Nature. Three British geneticists, led by L. Simon Whitfield of the University of Cambridge, carried out analysis of both mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosome DNA from the same people. The mitochondrial data yielded a time of origin of modern humans between 120,000 and 474,000 years ago. The Y chromosome data indicated the origin was probably between 37,000 and 49,000 years ago.


The "Adam and Eve" stuff is just a bit of poetic license ie, it's not a creationism or Biblical thing... everybody stay calm.


Here's a good story from BBC you may want to look at also: news.bbc.co.uk...

Found a decent map on this page (from "A Genetics Discovery Company") - www.dna-bioscience.co.uk...




FIGURE 1: This DNA migration pattern map, created from compiled research on DNA populations around the world, demonstrates that the first Humans originated in Africa about 130-180 thousand years ago. Notes: a) mtDNA macro-lineage L is predominant in Africa, b) mt-DNA macro-lineages M and N are found throughout Eurasia and Australia, c) mtDNA lineages H, I , J, K, T, N, U, V, W and X are predominant in West Eurasia, d) mtDNA lineages A, B, C, D, E, F, G, M, P, Q and Z are predominant in Asia and Oceania, and e) mtDNA lineages A, B, C, D, and X are found in the Americas.


For a layman, like myself, understanding DNA is the equivalent of understanding quantum mechanics (although many toss both around like their easily understood)... so i can't contribute much, but i hope the links are usefull.



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