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Y-Chromosome and Surname Analyses for Reconstructing Past Population Structures: the Sardinian Population As a Test Case
International Journal of Molecular Sciences Article Y-chromosome and Surname Analyses for Reconstructing Past Population Structures: The Sardinian Population as a Test Case Viola Grugni 1, Alessandro Raveane 1, Giulia Colombo 1, Carmen Nici 1, Francesca Crobu 1,2, Linda Ongaro 1,3,4, Vincenza Battaglia 1, Daria Sanna 1,5, Nadia Al-Zahery 1, Ornella Fiorani 6, Antonella Lisa 6, Luca Ferretti 1 , Alessandro Achilli 1, Anna Olivieri 1, Paolo Francalacci 7, Alberto Piazza 8, Antonio Torroni 1 and Ornella Semino 1,* 1 Dipartimento di Biologia e Biotecnologie “L. Spallanzani”, Università di Pavia, 27100 Pavia, Italy; [email protected] (V.G.); [email protected] (A.R.); [email protected] (G.C.); [email protected] (C.N.); [email protected] (F.C.); [email protected] (L.O.); [email protected] (V.B.); [email protected] (D.S.); [email protected] (N.A.-Z.); [email protected] (L.F.); [email protected] (A.A.); [email protected] (A.O.); [email protected] (A.T.) 2 Istituto di Ricerca Genetica e Biomedica, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), 09042 Monserrato, Italy 3 Estonian Biocentre, Institute of Genomics, Riia 23, 51010 Tartu, Estonia 4 Department of Evolutionary Biology, Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, Riia 23, 51010 Tartu, Estonia 5 Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche, Università di Sassari, 07100 Sassari, Italy 6 Istituto di Genetica Molecolare “L.L. Cavalli-Sforza”, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), 27100 Pavia, Italy; fi[email protected] -
Conference Brochure Confirmed Speakers
CONFERENCE BROCHURE CONFIRMED SPEAKERS GIANNI INFANTINO DAVID DEIN MBE VICTOR MONTAGLIANI DATO’ WINDSOR JOHN PRESIDENT AMBASSADOR - THE FA & PREMIER PRESIDENT GENERAL SECRETARY FIFA LEAGUE CONCACAF ASIAN FOOTBALL CONFEDERATION LISA BAIRD JAKE EDWARDS JOHN BARNES MBE PHILIPPE MOGGIO COMMISSIONER PRESIDENT FORMER INTERNATIONAL & MANAGER GENERAL SECRETARY NWSL UNITED SOCCER LEAGUE SPORTS COMMENTATOR CONCACAF JOSEPH DAGROSA JR DIDAC LEE YON DE LUISA LUDOVICA MANTOVANI CHAIRMAN BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEMBER PRESIDENT PRESIDENT - WOMEN’S FOOTBALL KAPITAL FOOTBALL GROUP FC BARCELONA MEXICAN FOOTBALL FEDERATION ITALIAN FOOTBALL FEDERATION (FIGC) RONAN JOYCE TOMOS GRACE PATRICK SCHMIDIGER HEIDI PELLERANO LEAD - EMEA sports TEAM HEAD OF SPORT SENIOR LEGAL COUNSEL CHIEF COMMERCIAL OFFICER partnerships YOUTUBE FIFA CONCACAF facebooK HUGO VARELA MONCHI SEBASTIÁN LANCESTREMÈRE JULIANO BELLETTI SENIOR PARTNER SPORT MANAGING DIRECTOR Sports Industry MANAGING DIRECTOR FORMER INTERNATIONAL PLAYER KAPITAL FOOTBALL GROUP SEVILLA FC MICROSOFT CORP JENNIFER valentine RAMON ALARCON RUBIALES SENIOR DIRECTOR - SOCCER, NORTH KARINA LEBLANC CBO & MEMBER OF THE BOARD OF COURT JESKE AMERICA HEAD OF WOMEN’S FOOTBALL DIRECTORS EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT ADIDAS CONCACAF REAL BETIS BALOMPIE UNITED SOCCER LEAGUE SEAN BAI AMANDA DUFFY JAMES KIRKHAM GERARD HOULLIER GENERAL MANAGER - ACADEMY EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT CHIEF BUSINESS OFFICER SOCCER MANAGER VALENCIA CF ORLANDO PRIDE DEFECTED RECORDS RED BULL company JOYCE COOK CHIEF SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY & CHRISTIAN LAU JAKE DAVIS -
DNA Evidence of a Croatian and Sephardic Jewish Settlement on the North Carolina Coast Dating from the Mid to Late 1500S Elizabeth C
International Social Science Review Volume 95 | Issue 2 Article 2 DNA Evidence of a Croatian and Sephardic Jewish Settlement on the North Carolina Coast Dating from the Mid to Late 1500s Elizabeth C. Hirschman James A. Vance Jesse D. Harris Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.northgeorgia.edu/issr Part of the Anthropology Commons, Communication Commons, Genealogy Commons, Geography Commons, International and Area Studies Commons, Jewish Studies Commons, Political Science Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Hirschman, Elizabeth C.; Vance, James A.; and Harris, Jesse D. () "DNA Evidence of a Croatian and Sephardic Jewish Settlement on the North Carolina Coast Dating from the Mid to Late 1500s," International Social Science Review: Vol. 95 : Iss. 2 , Article 2. Available at: https://digitalcommons.northgeorgia.edu/issr/vol95/iss2/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Nighthawks Open Institutional Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in International Social Science Review by an authorized editor of Nighthawks Open Institutional Repository. DNA Evidence of a Croatian and Sephardic Jewish Settlement on the North Carolina Coast Dating from the Mid to Late 1500s Cover Page Footnote Elizabeth C. Hirschman is the Hill Richmond Gott rP ofessor of Business at The nivU ersity of Virginia's College at Wise. James A. Vance is an Associate Professor of Mathematics at The nivU ersity of Virginia's College at Wise. Jesse D. Harris is a student studying Computer Science -
Among Jewish Populations, the Frequency of T Haplogroup Is
Supplementary methods Estimation of TMRCA using BATWING The program Bayesian Analysis of Trees With Internal Node Generation (BATWING) (Wilson et al. 2003) was run using a model of a single population with a period of constant size followed by exponential growth. The BATWING run consisted of 700,000 sampled points, following 50,000 steps of warmup. The parameters Nbetasamp and Treebetn were set to 20 and 15, respectively. The results were qualitatively the same for a run half as long. The states of several SNPs were used to condition the genealogy. The SNPs considered were M91, M42, M60, M168, M96, M35, P143, M216, P14, M201, P123, M304, M9, M526, P326, M20, M184, M70, L131, PS21, P77, M214, M45, M242, M207, M267, M172, P321, and P322. To estimate the age of individual branches, the minimum time of the mutations defining a branch was extracted from the output of BATWING and the distribution of those times was used in downstream analyses. The distributions of ratios of branch ages were obtained analogously. These ratios were seen to be rather independent of the priors on effective size (data not shown). Median and mean values, and 95% confidence intervals were obtained for the age of the mutations (Tables 1 and 2). Method of estimating TMRCA using the distribution of SNPs in the genealogy Mutations ascertained in a single lineage were examined, determining their temporal distribution in the genealogy of haplogroup T. This distribution was used to calculate the likelihoods of the relative branching times within the genealogy, which can be converted into absolute times by the use of an appropriate calibration point. -
The Genome-Wide Structure of the Jewish People
doi:10.1038/nature09103 LETTERS The genome-wide structure of the Jewish people Doron M. Behar1,2*, Bayazit Yunusbayev2,3*, Mait Metspalu2*, Ene Metspalu2, Saharon Rosset4,Ju¨ri Parik2, Siiri Rootsi2, Gyaneshwer Chaubey2, Ildus Kutuev2,3, Guennady Yudkovsky1,5, Elza K. Khusnutdinova3, Oleg Balanovsky6, Ornella Semino7, Luisa Pereira8,9, David Comas10, David Gurwitz11, Batsheva Bonne-Tamir11, Tudor Parfitt12, Michael F. Hammer13, Karl Skorecki1,5 & Richard Villems2 Contemporary Jews comprise an aggregate of ethno-religious communities clustered close to each other and intermediate between communities whose worldwide members identify with each other non-Jewish Middle Eastern and European populations10. through various shared religious, historical and cultural tradi- Illumina 610K and 660K bead arrays were used to genotype 121 tions1,2. Historical evidence suggests common origins in the Middle samples from 14 Jewish communities. The results were compared East, followed by migrations leading to the establishment of com- with 1,166 individuals from 69 non-Jewish populations (Supplemen- munities of Jews in Europe, Africa and Asia, in what is termed the tary Note 1 and Supplementary Table 1), with particular attention to Jewish Diaspora3–5. This complex demographic history imposes neighbouring or ‘host’ populations in corresponding geographic special challenges in attempting to address the genetic structure regions. These results were also integrated with analyses of genotype of the Jewish people6. Although many genetic studies have shed data from about 8,000 Y chromosomes and 14,000 mitochondrial light on Jewish origins and on diseases prevalent among Jewish DNA (mtDNA) samples (Supplementary Note 6 and Supplemen- communities, including studies focusing on uniparentally and tary Tables 4 and 5). -
Y-Chromosomal Microsatellites and Genetic Affinity Between
Genetics and the History of the Samaritans: Y-Chromosomal Microsatellites and Genetic AfÀnity between Samaritans and Cohanim 1,2 1 3 4 5 PETER J. OEFNER, GEORG HÖLZL, PEIDONG SHEN, ISAAC SHPIRER, DOV GEFEL, TAL 6 6 6 7 7 LAVI, EILON WOOLF, JONATHAN COHEN, CENGIZ CINNIOGLU, PETER A. UNDERHILL, 8 1 8,9 6 NOAH A. ROSENBERG, JOCHEN HOCHREIN, JULIE M. GRANKA, JOSSI HILLEL, AND 8 MARCUS W. FELDMAN Abstract The Samaritans are a group of some 750 indigenous Middle Eastern people, about half of whom live in Holon, a suburb of Tel Aviv, and the other half near Nablus. The Samaritan population is believed to have numbered more than a million in late Roman times but less than 150 in 1917. The ancestry of the Samaritans has been subject to controversy from late Biblical times to the present. In this study, liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization/quad- rupole ion trap mass spectrometry was used to allelotype 13 Y-chromosomal and 15 autosomal microsatellites in a sample of 12 Samaritans chosen to have as low a level of relationship as possible, and 461 Jews and non-Jews. Estimation of genetic distances between the Samaritans and seven Jewish and three non-Jewish populations from Israel, as well as populations from Africa, Pakistan, Turkey, and Europe, revealed that the Samaritans were closely related to Cohanim. This result supports the position of the Samaritans that they are descendants from the tribes of Israel dating to before the Assyrian exile in 722–720 BCE. In concordance with previously published single-nucleotide polymorphism haplotypes, each Samaritan family, with the exception of the Samaritan Cohen lineage, was observed to carry a distinctive Y-chromosome short tandem repeat haplotype that was not more than one mutation removed from the six-marker Cohen modal haplotype. -
Society Newsletters and Journals
chronicles Journal of the Jewish Genealogical And archival Society of Greater Philadelphia דברי הימים IAJGS conference Issue Chronicles - Volume 37-3 Fall 2020 chronicles Journal of the Jewish Genealogical And Archival Society of Greater Philadelphia JGASGP Membership JGASGP Officers Please make checks payable to JGASGP and mail to the address below. Please include your email address President: and zip+4 / postal code address. Annual Dues (January 1 - Dec. 31) Felicia Mode Alexander - [email protected] Individual............................................................. $25 Vice President (Programming): Family of two, per household...............................$35 Membership Applications / Renewals and payments Mark Halpern - [email protected] to: JGASGP • 1657 The Fairway, #145 Secretary & Membership Jenkintown, PA 19046 or online using PayPal. See the membership applica- Marilyn Mazer Golden - [email protected] tion later in this issue for details. Questions about membership status should be Treasurer: directed to [email protected] Tom Perloff - [email protected] Editorial Contributions Immediate Past President: Submission of articles on genealogy for publication Fred Blum - [email protected] in chronicles is enthusiastically encouraged. The editorial board reserves the right to decide whether to publish an article and to edit all submis- sions. Please keep a copy of your material. Anything JGASGP Directors you want returned should be accompanied by a self- Linda Ewall-Krocker - [email protected] addressed stamped envelope. Evan Fishman - [email protected] While email and other electronic files are highly pre- ferred, the editors will be happy to work with you and Joel Spector - [email protected] your material in any form. If you have an idea, please contact Evan Fishman of the Editorial Board by email: [email protected]. -
DNA Evidence Suggests Many Lowland Scots and Northern Irish Have Jewish Ancestry
IOSR Journal of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS) Volume 26, Issue 6, Series 10 (June. 2021) 22-42 e-ISSN: 2279-0837, p-ISSN: 2279-0845. www.iosrjournals.org DNA Evidence Suggests Many Lowland Scots And Northern Irish Have Jewish Ancestry. Elizabeth C. Hirschman Hill Richmond Gott Professor of Business Department of Business and Economics University of Virginia-Wise Abstract: This study uses the newest genealogical DNA methodology of phylogenetic trees to identify a large population of Jewish descent in the Scottish Lowlands and Northern Ireland. It is proposed that the majority of these Lowland Scots and Northern Ireland colonists were likely crypto-Jews who had arrived in Scotland in three phases: (1) with the arrival of William the Conqueror in 1066, (2) after the 1290 Expulsion of Jews from England, and (3) after the 1490 Expulsion of Jews from the Iberian Peninsula. Evidence is found that both the Ashkenazic and Sephardic branches of Judaism are present among these Lowland Scot and Northern Ireland residents. Keywords: Scotland, Northern Ireland, Sephardic Jews, Ashkenazic Jews, Genetic Genealogy --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date of Submission: 10-06-2021 Date of Acceptance: 25-06-2021 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I. INTRODUCTION Scotland is stereotypically thought of as a Celtic, Protestant and fiercely independent country. The present research takes issue with the first of these stereotypes and seeks to modify the second one. Although Celtic influence in genetics and culture is certainly present in the Scottish Highlands, we propose that there is a strong undercurrent of Judaic ancestry in the Scottish Lowlands that has influenced the country from the 1100s to the present day. -
SOCCERNOMICS NEW YORK TIMES Bestseller International Bestseller
4color process, CMYK matte lamination + spot gloss (p.2) + emboss (p.3) SPORTS/SOCCER SOCCERNOMICS NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER “As an avid fan of the game and a fi rm believer in the power that such objective namEd onE oF thE “bEst booKs oF thE yEar” BY GUARDIAN, SLATE, analysis can bring to sports, I was captivated by this book. Soccernomics is an FINANCIAL TIMES, INDEPENDENT (UK), AND BLOOMBERG NEWS absolute must-read.” —BillY BEANE, General Manager of the Oakland A’s SOCCERNOMICS pioneers a new way of looking at soccer through meticulous, empirical analysis and incisive, witty commentary. The San Francisco Chronicle describes it as “the most intelligent book ever written about soccer.” This World Cup edition features new material, including a provocative examination of how soccer SOCCERNOMICS clubs might actually start making profi ts, why that’s undesirable, and how soccer’s never had it so good. WHY ENGLAND LOSES, WHY SPAIN, GERMANY, “read this book.” —New York Times AND BRAZIL WIN, AND WHY THE US, JAPAN, aUstralia– AND EVEN IRAQ–ARE DESTINED “gripping and essential.” —Slate “ Quite magnificent. A sort of Freakonomics TO BECOME THE kings of the world’s for soccer.” —JONATHAN WILSON, Guardian MOST POPULAR SPORT STEFAN SZYMANSKI STEFAN SIMON KUPER SIMON kupER is one of the world’s leading writers on soccer. The winner of the William Hill Prize for sports book of the year in Britain, Kuper writes a weekly column for the Financial Times. He lives in Paris, France. StEfaN SzyMaNSkI is the Stephen J. Galetti Collegiate Professor of Sport Management at the University of Michigan’s School of Kinesiology. -
Ezana Kahsay Daniel Strachan Ben Lundt Marcel Zajac David Egbo
Ben Lundt Ezana Kahsay David Egbo Skye Harter Daniel Strachan Marcel Zajac www.adidas.com TABLE OF CONTENTS TEAM INFORMATION MEET THE 2018 AKRON ZIPS MEDIA GUIDE 2018 Table of Contents ............................................................................................. 1 Meet the Zips ....................................................................................... 20-30 Quick Facts ...................................................................................................2 Directions to Campus ....................................................................................... 3 THIS IS AKRON SOCCER Athletics Communications ............................................................................... 3 This is Akron Soccer ............................................................................. 32-35 Quick Facts ....................................................................................................... 4 MLS Draft History ................................................................................. 36-38 2018 Schedule ................................................................................................. 5 Zips In The Pros ..........................................................................................39 Series Records vs. 2018 Opponents .............................................................6-7 Zips by Class ..............................................................................................40 Roster Information .......................................................................................... -
More Anomalous Mitochondrial Dna Lineages in the Cherokee
MORE ANOMALOUS MITOCHONDRIAL DNA LINEAGES IN THE CHEROKEE Donald N. Yates Abstract. A purposive sample of individuals who took a mitochondrial DNA test to determine female lineage (n=67) was created from participants in DNA Consultants' Cherokee DNA Project Phase II. Almost all beforehand claimed matrilineal descent from a Native American woman, usually believed to be Cherokee, and often named in genealogy research undertaken by the customer. The majority of subjects revealed "anomalous" haplotypes not previously classified as American Indian. Many matched others in Phase I. Several individuals overcame the barrier of a sealed adoption to find biological relationships, often to other participants. As in Phase I, a Middle Eastern type, haplogroup T, emerged as the most common lineage (19.4% in Phase II, 22.7% overall in the project), followed by H, U and J, all Eurasian types. Sub-Saharan African haplogroup L (9%) was prominent as a minor category. Old Europe haplogroups I, N, V and W occurred in small amounts and should be considered strikingly new, unreported signals of authentic Cherokee ancestry. Background Ever since the pioneering work of Douglas C. Wallace, Rebecca L. Cann and others on the use of human mitochondrial DNA as a marker for genetic ancestry and disease, scientists have insisted on a very limited and rigid number of ancient Asian female founders for present-day American Indian populations. In 1993, Satoshi Horai of the National Institute of Genetics in Mishima, Japan was the lead author in a study with the agenda-setting title, "Peopling of the Americas, Founded by Four Major Lineages of Mitochondrial DNA." That same year, Antonio Torroni of the University of Pavia coined the term haplogroup in a publication in the American Journal of Human Genetics in which he and his co-authors postulated but four lineages, A, B, C and D to account for mitochondrial ancestries in their sample. -
College of Wooster Miscellaneous Materials: a Finding Tool
College of Wooster Miscellaneous Materials: A Finding Tool Denise Monbarren August 2021 Box 1 #GIVING TUESDAY Correspondence [about] #GIVINGWOODAY X-Refs. Correspondence [about] Flyers, Pamphlets See also Oversized location #J20 Flyers, Pamphlets #METOO X-Refs. #ONEWOO X-Refs #SCHOLARSTRIKE Correspondence [about] #WAYNECOUNTYFAIRFORALL Clippings [about] #WOOGIVING DAY X-Refs. #WOOSTERHOMEFORALL Correspondence [about] #WOOTALKS X-Refs. Flyers, Pamphlets See Oversized location A. H. GOULD COLLECTION OF NAVAJO WEAVINGS X-Refs. A. L. I. C. E. (ALERT LOCKDOWN INFORM COUNTER EVACUATE) X-Refs. Correspondence [about] ABATE, GREG X-Refs. Flyers, Pamphlets See Oversized location ABBEY, PAUL X-Refs. ABDO, JIM X-Refs. ABDUL-JABBAR, KAREEM X-Refs. Clippings [about] Correspondence [about] Flyers, Pamphlets See Oversized location Press Releases ABHIRAMI See KUMAR, DIVYA ABLE/ESOL X-Refs. ABLOVATSKI, ELIZA X-Refs. ABM INDUSTRIES X-Refs. ABOLITIONISTS X-Refs. ABORTION X-Refs. ABRAHAM LINCOLN MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP See also: TRUSTEES—Kendall, Paul X-Refs. Photographs (Proof sheets) [of] ABRAHAM, NEAL B. X-Refs. ABRAHAM, SPENCER X-Refs. Clippings [about] Correspondence [about] Flyers, Pamphlets ABRAHAMSON, EDWIN W. X-Refs. ABSMATERIALS X-Refs. Clippings [about] Press Releases Web Pages ABU AWWAD, SHADI X-Refs. Clippings [about] Correspondence [about] ABU-JAMAL, MUMIA X-Refs. Flyers, Pamphlets ABUSROUR, ABDELKATTAH Flyers, Pamphlets ACADEMIC AFFAIRS COMMITTEE X-Refs. ACADEMIC FREEDOM AND TENURE X-Refs. Statements ACADEMIC PROGRAMMING PLANNING COMMITTEE X-Refs. Correspondence [about] ACADEMIC STANDARDS COMMITTEE X-Refs. ACADEMIC STANDING X-Refs. ACADEMY OF AMERICAN POETRY PRIZE X-Refs. ACADEMY SINGERS X-Refs. ACCESS MEMORY Flyers, Pamphlets ACEY, TAALAM X-Refs. Flyers, Pamphlets ACKLEY, MARTY Flyers, Pamphlets ACLU Flyers, Pamphlets Web Pages ACRES, HENRY Clippings [about] ACT NOW TO STOP WAR AND END RACISM X-Refs.