Internet, DNA Tests Let Average Joes Practice 'Extreme Genealogy'

Free Press Release
iPhone 3G SEO Local Dating Auto Insurance ...
 

Home | Submit Release | Features & Pricing | Success Stories | Blog | Journal | FAQ | Search | Members' Area

News Archive > 2007 > Mar > 6
 Premier News
The commercial genealogy Web site Ancestry.com boasts of having the largest online family history database in the world, with more than 4 billion records.
For_Immediate_Release:

March 6, 2007 (Press Release) -- Lee Drew had a chat with some cousins the other day.

He was sitting in his home office in Orem, Utah. Four of the cousins were in England. One was in Australia, another in South Africa. A few more joined in from other parts of North America.

Drew is one of a new breed of genealogists who are doing things that would have been impossible in the not-so-distant era of dusty archives and whirring microfilm readers.

He has found so many of his relatives that he needs a computer database to keep track of them all — all 1.7 million of them.

Just as modern equipment has made it possible for any reasonably motivated person to climb Mount Everest or dive to the Andrea Doria, new technologies have made it possible to achieve incredible genealogical feats with relatively modest effort.

Now, it takes nothing more than casual curiosity and a few hours of research to discover that civil rights activist Al Sharpton is descended from slaves who were owned by ancestors of the late South Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond, a staunch opponent of desegregation.

That feat was accomplished by the commercial genealogy Web site Ancestry.com, which boasts of having the largest online family history database in the world, with more than 4 billion records.

Among the company's 725,000 subscribers there are people who have discovered they descend from royalty, or Mayflower passengers, or that Butch Cassidy is their seventh cousin.

"It's a great time to be alive," Drew said.

It isn't just the databases. Drew also uses the Internet to communicate with relatives around the globe, sharing information and research tips. And services like Google Books give him free access to formidable university library collections.

At 57 he remembers the old days, when doing genealogy meant driving up to the Mormon church's Family History Library in Salt Lake City or spending his vacations strolling through English churchyards looking at headstones. Now it can mean nothing more than strolling into his home office and booting up his computer.

Internet genealogy can be extremely productive, agreed Dick Eastman, who writes an online genealogy newsletter. But it depends greatly on where your ancestors came from.

The Internet is great for the United States, especially New England. And it's pretty good for Britain and Ireland. But if your ancestors came from Southern Europe, Africa, Asia or even Canada in some cases, the Internet can be pretty useless.

"If I want to go look up my French-Canadian ancestors, there's almost nothing to help me more than two or three generations back," Eastman said. "It's not going to be as rosy an experience as some of the online services would like you to think."

Herbert Huebscher, a retired electrical engineer from Franklin Square, N.Y., found himself in that kind of situation when he went looking for his ancestors. The most distant ones he could identify were Ukrainian Jews who were living in small village near the Romanian border around 1830.

"In general, Jewish paper-trail genealogy tends to hit a brick wall around 1800, give or take 50 years," Huebscher said.

To push farther into the past, he turned to DNA.

DNA testing has made it possible for people to make connections when the paper trail fades into tatters.

The technology was used several years ago to show that Thomas Jefferson — or one of his male relatives — fathered a child by his slave Sally Hemings.

It has also shown that a significant proportion of men in modern Ireland can trace a direct male descent from Niall of the Nine Hostages, a legendary 5th-century king.

Customers of Relative Genetics, a company based in Salt Lake City, have traced their roots to Scotland, Africa and other distant countries with DNA testing.

Huebscher had his own genetic profile tested by a Houston-based company called Family Tree DNA. He found that he matched one other individual in the company's database, a South African-born Londoner named Saul Isseroff.

[Both companies do testing on Y chromosomes and mitochondrial DNA, which yield information on only unbroken paternal and maternal lineages respectively. Each method could tell you something about your father's father's father's father's father, and your mother's mother's mother's mother's mother as well, but nothing about the 30 other people you would have had as ancestors five generations back.]

It turned out the two had some very distinctive anomalies in their DNA profiles, which allowed them to identify other matches as new Family Tree DNA customers joined the company's database. They have now found more than 40 closely matched families.

Nearly all of the families were Jewish, and nearly all of them trace their heritage back to Eastern Europe — though oddly enough, one family traces its roots to Puerto Rico.

A statistical analysis of the genetic data showed that whether they were named Huebscher or Isseroff, Wolinsky or Rosa, all of the families must have shared a single common ancestor who probably lived four or five centuries ago, long before most Jews even had surnames, much less written vital records.

Though his research is not yet conclusive, Huebscher believes the common genetic ancestor may have been descended from Sephardic Jews who lived in Spain before the Inquisition.

Just a little patience may be enough to solve the mystery, said Peggy Hayes of Relative Genetics.

"The databases are growing very rapidly," she said. "As the genetic genealogy databases grow, the success rate is going to grow as well."

For some lucky people, the techniques of extreme genealogy make it possible to trace their origins back not just centuries, but a millennium or more. All they have to do is link themselves to a royal line, Drew explained, and ride it back as far as it goes.

"We're all related to royalty," Drew said.

The trick is to prove it. But thanks to the power of extreme genealogy, it can be a lot easier than you might think.

Every French monarch since the 10th century was a descendant of Charlemagne. So was William the Conqueror, which means every British monarch since 1066 also descends from the King of the Franks.

And that means at least 18 U.S. presidents, 14 first ladies, Walt Disney, Colin Powell and Brooke Shields — a good number of the people whose family history has ever been seriously researched by genealogists — can trace their ancestry to Charlemagne.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/


Email Print Download SPAM Submit to RestNews.COM

LEAVE A COMMENT
Title:


Message:
You can use following font styles to enhance your article. (No HTML tags.)
[large]sample[/large] sample
[b]sample[/b]sample
[i]sample[/i]sample
[color=#ff0000]sample[/color]sample
Your name:
Your email: (Please provide a valid email.)
Please read the number in the image:
Publisher: zyk06




Submit Press Release
IndustriesCountriesTags

Top Headlines More>>
Hackers Claim to Revive 'Bricked' iPhones
It's unclear, however, how permanent any "unbrick" fix will be, or whether changes to the hacks that allow modifications will survive the next Apple iPhone update. Hackers have come up with at least one way to "unbrick" iPhones disabled by a firmware update Apple Inc. issued two weeks ago, developers of both paid and free unlock software said Thursday.
Palm's Centro is a Smart Phone With a Great Price
The Palm Centro from Sprint announced today the exceptional price of only $99. This is great news for consumers who want a smart phone, but don't want to shell out mega-prices for one. Of course, like most phones, you will need to sign a 2-year contract to get the new device. "Palm Centro has the power of a broadband smartphone at the price of a standard 12-key phone," said Ed...
IBM to offer free office software, targeting Microsoft
BEIJING, Sept. 19 (Xinhuanet) -- IBM Corp. is to start offering free programs for word processing, spreadsheets and presentations, in another bid to upset the dominance of Microsoft's Office suite, media reported Tuesday. The company was scheduled to announce the desktop software, called IBM Lotus Symphony, at an event Tuesday. The name for the suite is the same name IBM used...
Google prize aims to spur corporate race to moon
Search engine Google is offering more than $35 million prize money for companies to land a robot camera on the moon and send back high-resolution photos and data. It has launched a new site called Google Moon and hopes the prize will encourage what it calls a 'global private race to the moon'. Google hopes private companies can develop simpler technology than the equipment used by...
Google phone
The Google Phone is like the Roswell UFO: Few outsiders know if it really exists, but it's got a cult following. Just months after iPhone mania gripped Silicon Valley gadget heads, suspense is building over reports that Google Inc. plans to release its own cellphone. Color us skeptics on this one, but we've got a tipster claiming to have the scoop on Google Switch. This version of the...
Yahoo! Mail for mobile phone
Global Internet specialist Yahoo! Inc. has this week announced a widening to the range and draw of its existing e-mail service by granting online account holders the ability to stay in touch with their on-the-go friends via the dispatch and receipt of text messages to and from mobile phone handsets.
Easily Dominate Niche of the online Markets
If you're struggling desperately to make money online while your boss isn't watching, this will solve your 5 biggest problems... Discover The Magic Formula To Create “Set-it-and-Forget-it” Websites Using Wordpress & Make Your First Adsense Dollar in The Next 7 Days.
About PSP (PlayStation® Portable)
The PSP® (PlayStation® Portable) system is the first truly integrated portable entertainment system designed to handle multiple applications – music, video, photo, internet, and wireless connectivity, with games as its key feature. The PSP® system features an unmatched library of entertainment content, combining more than 135 games and more than 430 feature films, TV...
iPod Derivant
iPod is a brand of portable media players designed and marketed by Apple and launched in October 2001. Devices in the iPod range are primarily digital audio players, designed around a central click wheel — with the exception of the iPod shuffle, which uses buttons because of its small size. As of September 2006, the line-up consists of the video-capable fifth generation iPod, the smaller...

Sitemap | All News | Daily | Weekly | Monthly | Tags | Industries | Countries | RSS | Add URL | Contact Us

Free Press Release All press release information on this site, including free press release and premier press release, is solely based on what our users submit. Free-Press-Release.com disclaims that any right and responsibility for the information goes to the user who submit the press release. Some press release may be confusing without additional explanation. You should contact the provider with any questions about the information presented. In case some press release damages your benefits or violate your rights in any way, please contact us and we'll remove it immediately.
  • Press Release
  • Pub Gratuite