Genographic Project
Genographic Project
"A five-year project to reconstruct a genealogy of the world's populations and the migration paths of early humans from their ancestral homeland in Africa will be started today by the National Geographic Society and I.B.M., the society said in a statement.
"The goal of the program is to collect 100,000 blood samples from indigenous populations around the world and analyze them genetically. Researchers at 10 local centers and at the National Geographic Society in Washington will then assign the people who give blood to lineages that trace the routes traveled by their early ancestors.
"The program is an effort to accomplish the goals of the Human Genome Diversity Project, an initiative that was proposed by population geneticists in 1991." [1]
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Related Sourcewatch articles
- Kim McKay
- Spencer Wells
- Indigenous Peoples Council on Biocolonialism
- Waitt Family Foundation of San Diego
- JTE Creative Group
References
- ↑ Geographic Society Is Seeking a Genealogy of Humankind, New York Times, accessed September 22, 2008.
External links
- Ziba Kashef, "Genetic Drift", Znet, November 14, 2007.
- International Indian Treaty Council, "Genographic Project to Begin Expedition to Collect Blood from Alaska Natives", Press Release, July 19, 2006.