Recommended DNA Booklist

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Recommended DNA Booklist RECOMMENDED DNA BOOK LIST Trace Your Roots With DNA Out of Eden Using Genetic Tests to Explore Your Family Tree Stephen Oppenheimer Megan Smolenyak Smolenyak and Ann Turner Constable and Robinson, 2004 Rodale, 2004 Family History in the Genes The Real Eve Trace your DNA and grow your family tree Modern Man’s Journey Out of Africa Chris Pomery Stephen Oppenheimer The National Archives, Kew, Surry, England, 2007 Carroll and Graf Publishers, 2004 The Journey of Man The Seven Daughters of Eve A Genetic Odyssey The Science that Reveals Our Genetic Ancestry Spencer Wells Bryan Sykes Princeton University Press, 2002 W.W. Norton and Co, 2001 Random House Trade Paperbacks, 2003 DNA for Family Historians The Great Human Diasporas Allan Savin The History of Diversity and Evolution Federation of Family History Societies Luigi Luca and Francesco Cavalli-Sforza Publications, 2000 Perseus Book Publishing, 1995 Mapping Human History DNA: The Secret of Life Genes, Race, and Our Common Origins James D. Watson and Andrew Berry Steve Olson 2003 First Mariner Books, 2003 Genetic Genealogy DNA Testing Dictionary Unlocking Your Genetic History Charles F. Kerchner, Jr. (An NGS Guide) C. F. Kerchner and Associates, Inc., 2004 Step by Step Guide to Discovering Your http://www.geneticgenealogydictionary.com/ Family’s Medical and Genetic Heritage Thomas H. Shawker, M.D. Rutledge Hill Press, 2004 How to DNA Test Our Family Relationships DNA and Tradition: The Genetic Link GeneticTerrence Carmichael and Alexander Kuklin to the Ancient Hebrews AceN Press, 2000 Yaakov Kleinman Devora Publishing, 2004 Forensic Genealogy DNA & Genealogy Colleen Fitzpatrick, Phd Colleen Fitzpatrick & Andrew Yeiser Rice Book Press, Fountain Valley, CA, 2005 Rice Book Press, Fountain Valley, CA 2005 International Society of Genetic Genealogy (ISOGG) Educating – Promoting – Advocating Genetics as a Tool for Genealogical Research For more information or to join go to www.ISOGG.org .
Recommended publications
  • Haplogroup E3b1a2 As a Possible Indicator of Settlement in Roman Britain by Soldiers of Balkan Origin
    Haplogroup E3b1a2 as a Possible Indicator of Settlement in Roman Britain by Soldiers of Balkan Origin Steven C. Bird Abstract The invasion of Britain by the Roman military in CE 43, and the subsequent occupation of Britain for nearly four centuries, brought thousands of soldiers from the Balkan peninsula to Britain as part of auxiliary units and as regular legionnaires. The presence of Haplogroup E3b1a-M78 among the male populations of present- day Wales, England and Scotland, and its nearly complete absence among the modern male population of Ireland, provide a potential genetic indicator of settlement during the 1st through 4th Centuries CE by Roman soldiers from the Balkan peninsula and their male Romano-British descendants. Haplotype data from several major genetic surveys of Britain and Ireland are examined, analyzed and correlated with historical, epigraphic and archaeological information, with the goal of identifying any significant phylogeographic associations between E3b1a-M78 and those known Romano-British settlements and military posts that were associated specifically with Roman soldiers of Balkan origin. Studies by Cruciani et al. (2007), Perečić et al. (2005), and Marjanovic et al. (2005), examining the distribution of E3b1a-M78 and E3b1a2-V13 in the Balkans, are analyzed further to provide evidence of phylogeographic associations between the E3b1a2 haplotypes identified within the Balkans by these studies and those regions of the Balkans occupied first by the Roman army in antiquity. E3b1a2 is found to be at its highest frequency worldwide in the geographic region corresponding closely to the ancient Roman province of Moesia Superior, a region that today encompasses Kosovo, southern Serbia, northern Macedonia and extreme northwestern Bulgaria.
    [Show full text]
  • The Origins of the British: the New Prehistory of Britain Pdf, Epub, Ebook
    THE ORIGINS OF THE BRITISH: THE NEW PREHISTORY OF BRITAIN PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Stephen Oppenheimer | 656 pages | 12 Apr 2007 | Little, Brown Book Group | 9781845294823 | English | London, United Kingdom The Origins of the British: The New Prehistory of Britain PDF Book Lawson, D. Britain is joined to Europe no sea in between Mammoth, rhino and giant beavers live in 'Britain' Date of earliest human tools found on Suffolk coast. Merli; David M. Population genetics analysis and data sets Alleles identified with Genome Analysis Toolkit v. Britain becomes an Island. The historians' account is wrong in almost every detail. Recently Leslie et al. Antiquity — Ben Goldacre. New Stone Age begins: farming people arrive from Europe. Next Roman Britain. Proto-Indo-European spoken in Baltic area. Evidence for the presence of foreigners in Britain has been based on epigraphic sources, material culture and, more recently, bioarchaeological isotopic data 7 , 8 , 9. Nat Commun 8:e Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland. The plots in Fig. We generated interpolated frequency maps of blood group 26 and Y- chromosome frequency data 1 , 27 , 28 with ArcMap v. Guide To Better Acol Bridge. To head that off Britain sought to keep the Russians from occupying Constantinople and taking over the Bosporous Straits , as well as from threatening India via Afghanistan. His brother George VI was crowned king. Stonehenge completed. Further information: Napoleonic Wars. Recovered lithic artefacts suggest that hominin species occupied and deserted the British Isles at least nine times. Introduction of cremation of the dead and burials in round barrows. Lappalainen, T. Stone circles, Neolithic tombs and tools have been found all over the British Isles from the tip of Cornwall in the south to the very north of Scotland.
    [Show full text]
  • Book of the Discovery Channel Documentary "Out of Eden/The Real Eve" (2002) by Stephen Oppenheimer
    Book of the Discovery Channel Documentary "Out of Eden/The Real Eve" (2002) by Stephen Oppenheimer The book manuscript was originally titled: “Exodus: the genetic trail out of Africa” and was submitted by the author to Constable Robinson publishers also in June 2002, was accepted, edited and then multiply published 2003/4 in UK, USA & South Africa as: Out of Eden: The peopling of the world”(UK) The Real Eve: Modern Man's Journey Out of Africa”(US) & “Out of Africa's Eden: the peopling of the world”(SA) … and subsequently in various foreign translations The document following below contains parts of the author’s original text as submitted to the publisher. It includes the summary Contents pages for the 7 chapters, but also gives full text for the original Preface, Prologue and Epilogue : Contents (Full author’s copyright submitted text of Preface, Prologue and Epilogue follow ‘Contents’) Preface 5 Prologue: 9 1: Why us? Where do we come from? - Why us - The climate our teacher - Walking apes - Growing brains in the big dry- Why did we grow big brains? II. Talking apes Touched with the gift of speech? - Baldwin's idea - Ever newer models - How did our brain grow and what does it do for us? - Redundant computing power or increasing central control? - Food for thought or just talking about food? - Symbolic thought and Language: purely human abilities? - Speech and higher thought: big bang creation or gradual evolution? Chapter 1: Out of Africa 32 Introduction - Cardboard keys to Life - A Black Eve - Objections from multi-regionalists - Objections
    [Show full text]
  • Molecular Phylogeography of a Human Autosomal Skin Color Locus
    G3: Genes|Genomes|Genetics Early Online, published on September 18, 2013 as doi:10.1534/g3.113.007484 Molecular phylogeography of a human autosomal skin color locus under natural selection Victor A. Canfield*, Arthur Berg§,†, Steven Peckins‡,**, Steven M. Wentzel‡,**, Khai Chung Ang‡,**, Stephen Oppenheimer§§ and Keith C. Cheng*,§,** * Department of Pharmacology, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA 17033 § Penn State Cancer Institute, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA 17033 † Department of Public Health Sciences, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA 17033 ‡ Jake Gittlen Cancer Research Foundation, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA 17033 ** Division of Experimental Pathology, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA 17033 §§ School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography, Oxford University, Oxford, OX2 6PE, UK © The Author(s) 2013. Published by the Genetics Society of America. Running Title: [35 characters] History of a haplotype under selection Keywords: Natural selection, skin color, SLC24A5, haplotype, recombination Corresponding authors: Victor A. Canfield Department of Pharmacology, R130 Penn State College of Medicine 500 University Drive Hershey, PA 17033 tel: 717-531-4563 fax: 717-531-5013 [email protected] Keith C. Cheng Jake Gittlen Cancer Research Foundation Penn State College of Medicine 500 University Drive Hershey, PA 17033 tel: 717-319-1825 fax: 717-531-5634 [email protected] 2 ABSTRACT Divergent natural selection caused by differences in solar exposure has resulted in distinctive variations in skin color between human populations. The derived light skin color allele of the SLC24A5 gene, A111T, predominates in populations of Western Eurasian ancestry. To gain insight into when and where this mutation arose, we defined common haplotypes in the genomic region around SLC24A5 across diverse human populations, and deduced phylogenetic relationships between them.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    Image Credits, Indian Ocean in World History, March 28, 2010 TABLE OF CONTENTS PREHISTORIC ERA .......................................................................................................................................... 2 ANCIENT ........................................................................................................................................................ 5 CLASSICAL ERA ............................................................................................................................................ 10 MEDIEVAL ERA ............................................................................................................................................ 16 FIRST GLOBAL ERA ...................................................................................................................................... 23 INDUSTRIAL AND IMPERIAL ERA ................................................................................................................. 31 20TH CENTURY AND MODERN ERA .............................................................................................................. 39 1 Image Credits, Indian Ocean in World History, March 28, 2010 PREHISTORIC ERA Arabian or Persian Gulf 1-2. © NASA, Washington, DC Blombos Cave Artifacts 1-3. © Blombos Cave Project, Cape Town Bridge to Ice Age Sahul 1. © NASA, Washington, DC 2. Courtesy of Eco Lodges Indonesia, Satwa Sumatra Eco Elephant Lodges Description of the Indian Ocean 1. © Intute, University of Manchester Dr. Li Jin © National
    [Show full text]
  • Oppenheimer S. Human's Association with Water Bodies: The
    HUMAN EVOLUTION Vol. 28 n.3-4 (137-170) - 2013 Oppenheimer S. Human’s Association with Water Bodies: Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary The ‘Exaggerated Diving Reflex’ and Anthropology, School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography, its Relationship with the Evolutionary University of Oxford, UK. Allometry of Human Pelvic and Brain Sizes E-mail: [email protected] As Darwin suggested, humans first evolved in Africa, then quickly spread out. Occupation sites from the Palaeolithic to the present show a niche preference for proximity to water bod- ies, rivers, lakes and sea coasts. From 165 Kya there is clear evidence for shellfish use, with characteristic shell middens in littoral zones. Genetic phylo-geography for Anatomically Modern Humans (AMH) indicates there was a single definitive exit from near the Horn Africa about 70 Kya, moving, with ex- traordinary rapidity, along coastlines around the Indian Ocean to Bali, later to China and the Americas. They crossed the sea to New Guinea and Australia by 50 KYA. Although AMH were not the first humans to cross Wallace’s Line, they were the first to make open-sea voyages of over 100 miles. Why are anatomi- cally modern humans associated with water bodies? Is it to do with their daily need for fresh drinking water? Is there any spe- cial significance to their exploitation of the food they find there, or is it just making the best of their niche? What aspect of their past evolution explains their ‘exaggerated mammalian diving reflex’? How is it connected with water? The pan-vertebrate reflex cardio-vascular response to extreme hypoxia has long been acknowledged as essential protection in terrestrial vertebrates against the risk of perinatal asphyxia as their milieu changes from aqueous to air.
    [Show full text]
  • Geographic Patterns of R1b in the British Isles – Deconstructing Oppenheimer
    Journal of Genetic Genealogy, 3(2):63-71, 2007 Geographic Patterns of R1b in the British Isles – Deconstructing Oppenheimer Kevin D. Campbell Abstract Stephen Oppenheimer’s book, The Origins of the British— A Genetic Detective Story, references a clan nomenclature which is not explicitly defined in the text nor linked to the underlying data. This paper attempts to understand Oppenheimer’s analysis while incorporating results f rom subsequent clan testing to hypothesize the haplotype definitions for Oppenheimer’s R1b sub-clans. Introduction vide a detailed analysis of those samples for the reader. For example, Sykes does not fully describe his “clan” The essence of genetic genealogy is to understand where system in adequate detail. A “clan” is a group of we’ve come from. However, many of the recent papers individuals with closely matching Y-STR haplotypes, to and books have missed opportunities to provide strong which a fanciful name has been assigned by the author links relating genetics to regional locations. Specifically, of the book. However, Sykes does not tell us which two recent books by Oxford professors–Blood of the haplotypes are included in each clan. Isles: Exploring the Genetic Roots of Our Tribal History, by Bryan Sykes (2006), and The Origins of the My analysis of Sykes’ clans, which included the British—A Genetic Detective Story, by Stephen determination of the probable clan definitions, was Oppenheimer (2006) address genetics in the British Isles, published in the last issue of this journal (Campbell, but both omit important genetic information. Both 2007). books are based upon the analysis of thousands of DNA samples collected in the British Isles, but in each case, In this article I will attempt to achieve the same general critical elements of the analysis are left unpublished— result for Oppenheimer’s book.
    [Show full text]
  • Peace Corps / Nepal 22
    Peace Corps / Nepal 22 A Retrospective on the Post-Peace Corps Careers of Trainees, Trainers, Staff & RPCVs Peace Corps / Nepal 22 1970 - 2010 A Retrospective on the Post-Peace Corps Careers of Trainees, Trainers, Staff & RPCVs John P. Hughes, Editor Washington, DC March 2010 Dedicated to the Memory of Mike Furst (1927-2005) Peace Corps Country Director - Nepal 1970-72 Cover Photo: Tommy Randall and Jim Walsh resting at a pass south of Okhaldhunga in March 1972. 2 Contents Preface ................................................................................................................ 5 Introduction .......................................................................................................... 7 Map of Nepal ....................................................................................................... 11 Nepal 22 Training Program ..................................................................................... 12 Rice Fields of the Nepal Terai ................................................................................... 27 Wheat Project in the Nepal Terai .............................................................................. 28 The Nixon Peace Corps .......................................................................................... 29 The Peace Corps & the Draft .................................................................................... 31 HMG & the Panchayat System .................................................................................. 33 Peace Corps Nepal Staff
    [Show full text]
  • 'Express Train from Taiwan to Polynesia': on the Congruence Of
    The ‘Express Train from Taiwan to Polynesia’: on the congruence of proxy lines of evidence Stephen Oppenheimer Abstract Renfrew’s concept of an Indo-European expansion was carefully hedged with strict caveats to avoid earlier methodological and political pitfalls. His ‘farming-language dispersal’ hypothesis has inspired others to seek similar examples among other language families. This review argues that the model has gone awry in one of these, the ‘Express Train from Taiwan to Polynesia’ hypothesis. The persistence of the Austronesian language/rice-farming hypothesis results from a cluster of methodological errors that include an overall failure to heed Renfrew’s caveats, over-reliance on a controversial putative linguistic homeland and failure to deal with parallel evidence impartially, resulting in unsupported claims of congruence. Keywords Island Southeast Asia; Austronesian; genetics; physical anthropology; historical linguistics; migration. The origin of the farming-language dispersal hypothesis After the Second World War, linguistic-racial migrationism fell into disrepute. In 1987 Renfrew (1989: 3–24) reconsidered Indo-European origins. Phylogeographic analysis of related languages was central to his model, but he warned against the pitfalls of ‘linguistic palaeontology’ (cultural reconstruction based on reconstructed proto-words for cultural items). He pointed out that language groups, human groups and pots do not necessarily equate with each other, and that individual cultural items can move independently of cultural packages or people. He also accepted Ammerman and Cavalli-Sforza’s (1984) genetic ‘wave-of-advance’ model. The archetype of the farming-language dispersal model thus explicitly specified both genetic and cultural diffusion, rather than just population invasion and replacement.
    [Show full text]
  • Book Reviews
    BOOK REVIEWS Eden in the East. Stephen Oppenheimer. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1998. 560 pp.; photographs, diagrams, maps, figures, tables. Hardcover. $35.00. Reviewed by A. S. BAER, Oregon State University, Corvallis The author, a pediatrician, has written this tween 15,000 and 8000 B.P., causing Hoa­ book on historical geography as a general­ binhians or other people to flee to India ist. He is not averse to making superwaves and elsewhere. Ancestors of today's Orang out of specialists' findings in putting forth Asli, the indigenous people of the Malay­ his grand theory of prehistory with a sian peninsula, were an early fleeing group. Southeast Asian focus. As he sees it, his Second, about 10,000 B.P., the sea level rise views are akin to those of Wilhelm Sol­ was slower, with large river deltas forming heim and William Meachem, not those of and providing fertile sites for agriculture. Peter Bellwood (see references in Bellwood But the 8000 B.P. surge was a superflood, 1997). with supertsunamis and a sea transgression To take an academic approach, one 5 m above today's level, drowning most might ask what problem the author set out lowland Neolithic sites occupied from to solve and what are his methodology, his 10,000 to 5000 B.P. (p. 20). Third, because results, and his conclusion. The problem he of this superflood, the last major emigration discusses is the postglacial inundation of the began from Sundaland, with Austronesians Sunda Shelf and its consequences. As his heading to the Pacific and rice cultivation tale unfolds, he hypothesizes that a rise in heading to India, while China, India, and sea level and, indeed, "floods," on the shelf Egypt remained Neolithic.
    [Show full text]
  • Celticity: Migration Or Fashion?
    Issue 2 2012 Celticity: Migration or Fashion? SAMANTHA LEGGETT THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY The definition of the Celts and Celtic is at the core of Celtic Studies, either in antiquity or the early medieval period. The modern pop-culture understanding of the people, and their culture is very different to the evidence from ancient times; however even when examining archaeological sites and the writings of the ancient Greeks and Romans we find discontinuities. The archaeological evidence shows a migration of culture from the Celtic homeland in central continental Europe, a myriad of Halstatt and La Tène artefacts, stone henges and circles, scattered across Gaul and into the British Isles (the home of the modern day Celts). The historical record sees a distinction between the Keltoi/Gauls and the tribes of the British Isles, however similarities between them are apparent. The linguistic evidence is unclear, showing some relationships between the British Celts and the ancient Keltoi, but nothing definitive. The genetic evidence gives the clearest answer to the question “Celticity: Migration or Fashion?”, that the Celts of the British Isles are not genetically related to the original ancient Keltoi (not recently). This paper ultimately shows that Celticity was due to the spread of fashion and not an actual migration of people from the Celtic homeland. Introduction Who were or are the Celts and how are they to be defined? This is the biggest question of Celtic Studies. Surely the Celts existed (and might still today), but it is difficult to find truth amongst the legends, modern misunderstandings and the ‘hard’ evidence (which is often contradictory).
    [Show full text]
  • 'Medieval Film' on the Public Understanding of the Middle Ages
    Based on a True History?: The Impact of Popular ‘Medieval Film’ on the Public Understanding of the Middle Ages Paul B. Sturtevant Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Leeds Institute for Medieval Studies and Centre for World Cinemas September, 2010 ii The candidate confirms that the work submitted is his own and that appropriate credit has been given where reference has been made to the work of others. This copy has been supplied on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. The right of Paul B. Sturtevant to be identified as Author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. © 2010 The University of Leeds and Paul B. Sturtevant iii Acknowledgements An early draft of this thesis contained the line ‘Epic films do not spring, fully-fledged, from the skull of Mel Gibson’. While that line (and the glibness and amusing metaphor it contains) are gone, the sentiment is still there; no matter whose name is in bold on the poster, films are a collaborative art form with hundreds of people working to create the final product. A thesis is no different; just because my name is on the title page does not mean that I did not enjoy the collaborative efforts of a number of people, all of whom deserve acknowledgement and thanks. First and foremost, my supervisors. The interdisciplinarity of this project demanded expertise from a variety of fields, and as such I received helpful advice from a larger-than-usual number of people in different disciplines.
    [Show full text]