I was watching the “Today Show” a few days ago and it featured an interesting project co-sponsored by the National Geographic Society, IBM, the Waitt Family Foundation and geneticist Spencer ...
On April 13, 2005, the National Geographic Society and IBM announced the launch of the Genographic Project: Tracing Human Roots to a Single Origin, a controversial genetic research initiative that ...
Correction: The Dec. 1 story “”Genome project traces human history”” misused the word “”genome”” in the headline, as The Genographic Project does not deal with genomes. The story also erroneously ...
Want to be a part of ancient history? The National Geographic Society’s Genographic Project is inviting the public to join its massive effort to map the history of human migration using DNA. More than ...
Want to be a part of ancient history? The National Geographic Society’s Genographic Project is inviting the public to join its massive effort to map the history of human migration using DNA. More than ...
While I was at Spencer Wells' poster at ASHG I was primarily curious about bar plots. He's got really good spatial coverage, so I'm moderately excited about the paper (though I didn't see much ...
Seven years ago, National Geographic launched a project aimed at using genetic analysis to map tens of thousands of years of human migration — and now a new phase of the Genographic Project promises ...
Through a new analytical method, IBM and the Genographic Project find new evidence to support southern route of human migration from Africa via the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait in Arabia before any movement ...
The National Geographic Society has announced the next phase of its Genographic Project -- the multiyear global research initiative that uses DNA to map the history of human migration. Building on ...
Have you ever tried tracing back your family tree only to get stuck at great great Grandpa Jim? Are you curious about who your ancestors were and where they might have come from? If so, you’ll ...
I have just received results of a test that traced back my genome 67,000 years. The cutting edge test has jangled my identity, serving me breath-taking personal information on a petri-dish platter.
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