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    1. Re: [CherokeeGene] Leavens in Kentucky, born 1828
    2. Dj M
    3. Reference - Dennis Jenkins and Paisley caves Oregon. You should find a better observation. I don’t because I read like we all do to learn. Dennis has the ( only ) found DNA sample that old on the continent. They listed all the markers. Dan -----Original Message----- From: Susan Reynolds Sent: Friday, December 28, 2012 11:13 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [CherokeeGene] Leavens in Kentucky, born 1828 I see the misunderstanding on the "Chinese" issue. The new DNA standards show Native Americans as Asian, ie they originated in Asia, but are not necessarily Chinese. There are many other groups on the Asian continent and islands: Mongols, Indians (from India), Japanese, etc. The Chinese are the more numerous, so we often think of Asians as Chinese. Susan =====*NOTICE THIS*===== Cherokee genealogy; topic specific certain conversation is allowed to do genealogy; and sort fact from (fiction). Rude people will be moderated asap! List archive http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/index?list=cherokeegene please take non genealogy to [email protected] Dual admin. Dan and Joyce ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    12/28/2012 04:38:26
    1. Re: [CherokeeGene] 2012 Top Genetic Genealogy Happenings
    2. Joy King
    3. http://dna-explained.com/2012/12/28/2012-top-10-genetic-genealogy-happenings/ 1. The New Root – Haplogroup A00 At the Family Tree DNA conference in November, Michael Hammer, Bonnie Schrack and Thomas Krahn announced that they had made a monumental discovery in the age of modern man known as Y-line Adam. The discovery of Haplogroup A00 pushes the “birth” of mankind back from about 140,000 years ago to an amazing 338,000 years ago. Utterly amazing. The DNA came from an American family from South Carolina. This discovery highlights the importance of citizen science. Bonnie is a haplogroup administrator who recognized the potential importance of one of her participants’ DNA. Thomas Krahn of course is with Family Tree DNA and ran the WTY test, and Michael Hammer is at the University of Arizona. So you have the perfect blend here of participant, citizen scientist, commercial lab and academia. What was never thought possible a decade or so ago is not only working, it’s working well and changing the face of both science and humanity. From: Dj M Sent: Friday, December 28, 2012 2:38 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [CherokeeGene] Leavens in Kentucky, born 1828 Reference - Dennis Jenkins and Paisley caves Oregon. You should find a better observation. I don’t because I read like we all do to learn. Dennis has the ( only ) found DNA sample that old on the continent. They listed all the markers. Dan

    12/28/2012 08:19:59