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Top: Science: Biology: Genetics: Eukaryotic: Animal: Mammal: Human: Population:
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» Bradshaw Foundation: Journey of Mankind - Stephen Oppenheimer provides a graphic display of the peopling of the world, tracking routes through a synthesis of chromosome evidence, archaeology, climatology and fossil study.
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» Genebase - Using DNA testing to trace deep ancestral origins and population migrational patterns.
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» The Human Genome Diversity Project - Stanford University describes this international project that seeks to understand the diversity and unity of the entire human species. Includes a summary of the purpose of the project and of the planning work done.
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» Human Population Genetics Laboratory - Located in the Department of Genetics at the Stanford University School of Medicine. Includes personnel profiles, projects, and publications available in pdf format.
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- National Geographic: The Genographic Project - A 5-year study by The National Geographic Society, IBM, geneticist Spencer Wells, and the Waitt Family Foundation to compile a genetic atlas. Project outline and methods, how to participate, news, genetics overview and an interactive atlas of the human journey.
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» People of the British Isles - A study by the University of Oxford. Blood samples from 3,500 people from rural populations throughout the British Isles will be used to look at the patterns of differences in people’s genetic make up around the UK.
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» World Haplogroups - Maps of the world showing the distribution of Y chromosome and the MTDNA haplogroups throughout the world, with references, by J. Douglas McDonald. [PDF]
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» Prospect Magazine: Myths of British Ancestry - Stephen Oppenheimer declares that ancestors of the British and Irish were Basques, not Celts. The Celts were not wiped out by the Anglo-Saxons, in fact neither had much impact on the genetic stock of these islands. (October, 2006)
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» BBC: English and Welsh are Races Apart - Genetic research suggests the Welsh are the "true" Britons while the English evolved from Anglo-Saxon invaders from modern-day Holland. (June 30, 2002)
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» BBC: Genetic 'Adam Never Met Eve' - Genetic studies suggest our most common paternal and maternal ancestors walked the planet more than 80,000 years apart. (October 30, 2000)
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» Science Spectra: Why Y? - Neil Bradman and Mark Thomas look at the Y chromosome in the study of human evolution, migration and prehistory. (1998)
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