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According to a report in Live Science, a team led by Douglas Stenton of Nunavut’s Department of Culture and Heritage obtained DNA samples from at least 24 members of the ill-fated Franklin Expedition, which attempted to find a Northwest Passage linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans in 1845. All were lost when Sir John Franklin’s ships were trapped in the ice of the Canadian Arctic and the sailors abandoned their ships in 1848. Link
originally posted by: Kandinsky
a reply to: JohnnyCanuck
Howdy JC, it'll be cool for anyone who's had their genome results because a couple of the firms do some family tree mapping. "Hey, we're descendants of the Franklin Expedition Crew!!"
I'm not seeing the wider point of getting their DNA samples. Help me out!
Matching the DNA with the living would indicate who died where, the study says. "If we can find those living descendants -- if they're directly descended from those crew members -- and if they're willing to submit a DNA sample in the form of a ... cheek swab, then we can analyze their DNA, compare it to the DNA extracted from these skeletal remains and see if there is a match," Keenlyside told The Canadian Press.
Doug Stenton, lead author of the study released online in the Journal of Archeological Science: Reports, said knowing who the men were would shed light on their rank. That information would add to a bank of knowledge that could one day unlock the mystery of the failed mission.
"I think it's going to be a combination of things that ultimately lead to an understanding of what happened," said Stenton, who is with Nunavut's Culture and Heritage Department. "It's important we take advantage of as many sources as we can."
Franklin researchers hope to link DNA from sailors' bones with descendants
originally posted by: Kandinsky
a reply to: JohnnyCanuck
Well anything that fills in a few gaps in our history is positive.
Those guys had balls of steel. Very small ones, considering the climate, but steel nonetheless.
Probably to make sure they weren't attacked by some shapeshifting alien who might have taken them out one at a time while assuming their shape and their identity. Or, no, that was a movie.
originally posted by: Kandinsky
a reply to: JohnnyCanuck
Howdy JC, it'll be cool for anyone who's had their genome results because a couple of the firms do some family tree mapping. "Hey, we're descendants of the Franklin Expedition Crew!!"
I'm not seeing the wider point of getting their DNA samples. Help me out!
originally posted by: vonclod
a reply to: intrptr
I think the lead is a strong contributer to their peril, they were not making good decisions due to the amount of lead they were taking in, a bad decision there can be a real deal changer.
originally posted by: vonclod
a reply to: intrptr
I think the lead is a strong contributer to their peril, they were not making good decisions due to the amount of lead they were taking in, a bad decision there can be a real deal changer.
originally posted by: Kandinsky
a reply to: JohnnyCanuck
Hiya buddy, there's an article on The New Yorker about photographs that inspired songs. I saw the image below and remembered this thread: