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Category Archives: Transhuman News

R-DNA feat. Backspin (BKS) – Highlife – Video

Posted: May 13, 2013 at 12:55 pm


R-DNA feat. Backspin (BKS) - Highlife
http://www.facebook.com/pages/R-DNA/164654013589702?fref=ts http://www.facebook.com/pages/Backspin-BKS/144251552309267.

By: RDNASound

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R-DNA feat. Backspin (BKS) - Highlife - Video

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DNA proves Ohio kidnap suspect is father of captive’s child – Video

Posted: at 12:55 pm


DNA proves Ohio kidnap suspect is father of captive #39;s child
Authorities released the results of paternity tests for the child who had spent her entire life as a captive in a Cleveland home. Dean Reynolds reports.

By: CBSNewsOnline

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DNA Provides New Evidence Against Accused Cleveland Kidnapper – Video

Posted: at 12:55 pm


DNA Provides New Evidence Against Accused Cleveland Kidnapper
KRON 4 #39;s Catherine Heenan reports.

By: kron4tv

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DNA Provides New Evidence Against Accused Cleveland Kidnapper - Video

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Hebrew DNA among Mayan populations – Video

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Hebrew DNA among Mayan populations
Visit BMAF.org.

By: BMAForg

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DNA evidence for The Book of Mormon – Video

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DNA evidence for The Book of Mormon
Visit BMAF.org.

By: BMAForg

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Litterbugs Beware: Turning Found DNA Into Portraits

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A dropped cigarette butt, a chewed-up piece of gum, a stray hair. Artist Heather Dewey-Hagborg uses DNA she's picked up around New York City to generate 3-D portraits of those who left their trash behind. This rendering of a brown-eyed man of Eastern European descent came out of a cigarette butt Dewey-Hagborg found in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Heather Dewey-Hagborg/Heather Dewey-Hagborg

Dewey-Hagborg documents each sample, photographing it where she finds it. This cigarette butt was collected on Myrtle Avenue and Himrod Street in Brooklyn.

Heather Dewey-Hagborg/Heather Dewey-Hagborg

That cigarette butt, collected on Myrtle Avenue and Himrod Street in Brooklyn, showed characteristics of a brown-eyed female of European descent.

Heather Dewey-Hagborg/Heather Dewey-Hagborg

This wad of gum was collected on Wilson Avenue and Stanhope Street in Brooklyn.

Heather Dewey-Hagborg/Heather Dewey-Hagborg

The DNA collected from that wad of gum came from a brown-eyed male of Native American and South American decent.

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Litterbugs Beware: Turning Found DNA Into Portraits

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DNA from dropped mask prompts arrest

Posted: at 12:55 pm

WESTFIELD, Ind. - Felony burglary charges have been lodged against an ex-con after police said he left behind a mask with his DNA at a home he was burglarizing in Carmel.

It started as police were investigating the burglary of a home that was under construction on Pete Dye Boulevard in Carmel in November 2012, when officers located a camouflage mask on the basement floor of the ransacked construction site.

Construction workers told police that the mask didn't belong to any of them, so police sent the mask to the Indiana State Police crime lab so that DNA could be analyzed.

The DNA from the mask, which could include hair or saliva, led to a quick match in the nationwide Combined DNA Index System (CODIS), which contains DNA profiles for millions of current and former convicts and others throughout the country.

In court papers, Westfield police said tests showed that the DNA from the mask belonged to Gary Fairchild, 29, who has been to prison twice for other burglaries in 2004 and again in 2009. State prison records show he was out on parole for those crimes until 2016.

Fairchild has now been charged with new felony counts of burglary and theft. He is behind bars at the Hamilton County Jail on a $10,000 bond. His trial is set for May 14 in Hamilton County Superior Court 3.

In addition to Young's DNA, police have obtained a search warrant for his cellphone records to see whether he sent or received calls or text messages near the most recent crime scene around the time that it was being burglarized.

Copyright 2013 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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DNA project surprises, enlightens West Chester students

Posted: at 12:55 pm

Kristin E. Holmes, Inquirer Staff Writer Posted: Monday, May 13, 2013, 7:16 AM

Before he walked into an honors communications course at West Chester University, Grant Hubbard's ethnic identity was the stuff of skin color and oral history.

He was the white guy with European roots whose family came to the United States shortly after the Mayflower arrived.

Then science took over.

The swipe of a cotton swab inside his cheek and a DNA test indicated that he had ancestors from Europe, and elsewhere.

"My results came back 60 percent Southeast Asian," said Hubbard, 20, of Downingtown. "That's quite a bit different from what my family had always thought we were."

Hubbard is among 350 students who have participated in professor Anita Foeman's DNA Discussion Project, a course at the Chester County school that takes a scientific look at each student's genetic makeup.

The class is an effort to look at diversity in a way that shows connections instead of differences. Students set up websites and write papers about the results.

"It's much harder to totally write somebody off when you realize that 'I have some of that in me as well,' " Foeman said.

The results often shock students, prompting them to reexamine their identities, question their relatives, and start researching family history.

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DNA project surprises, enlightens West Chester students

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'Junk' DNA mystery solved: It's not needed

Posted: at 12:55 pm

Enrique Ibarra-Laclette, Claudia Anah Prez-Torres and Paulina Lozano-Sotomayor

The humped bladderwort plant (shown here in a scanning electron micrograph) is a voracious carnivore, with its tiny bladders leveraging vacuum pressure to suck in bitty prey at great speed.

By Tia Ghose, LiveScience

One person's trash may be another person's treasure, but sometimes, trash is just trash.

So-called junk DNA, the vast majority of the genome that doesn't code for proteins, really isn't needed for a healthy organism, according to new research.

"At least for a plant, junk DNA really is just junk it's not required," said study co-author Victor Albert, a molecular evolutionary biologist at the University of Buffalo in New York.

While the findings, published Sunday in the journal Nature, concern acarnivorous plant, they could have implications for the human genome as well. Genes make up only 2 percent of the human genome, and researchers have argued in recent years that the remaining 98 percent may play some hidden, useful role. [Image Gallery: Amazing Carnivorous Plants]

Trash or treasureFor decades, scientists have known that the vast majority of the genome is made up of DNA that doesn't seem to contain genes or turn genes on or off. The thinking went that most of this vast terrain of dark DNA consisted of genetic parasites that copy segments of DNA and paste themselves repeatedly in the genome, or that it consists of the fossils of once useful genes that have now been switched off. Researchers coined the termjunk DNAto refer to these areas.

"Nobody's really known what junk DNA does or doesn't do," Albert told LiveScience.

But in recent years, researchers have debated whether "junk" might be a misnomer and if this mysterious DNA might play some role. A massive project called ENCODE, which aimed to uncover the role of the 3.3 billion base pairs, orletters of DNA, in the human genome that don't code for proteins, found that in test tubes, about 80 percent of the genome seemed to have some biological activity, such as affecting whether genes turn on. Whether that translated to any useful or necessary function for humans, however, wasn't resolved.

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'Junk' DNA mystery solved: It's not needed

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'Junk' DNA mystery solved

Posted: at 12:55 pm

Enrique Ibarra-Laclette, Claudia Anah Prez-Torres and Paulina Lozano-Sotomayor

The humped bladderwort plant (shown here in a scanning electron micrograph) is a voracious carnivore, with its tiny bladders leveraging vacuum pressure to suck in bitty prey at great speed.

By Tia Ghose, LiveScience

One person's trash may be another person's treasure, but sometimes, trash is just trash.

So-called junk DNA, the vast majority of the genome that doesn't code for proteins, really isn't needed for a healthy organism, according to new research.

"At least for a plant, junk DNA really is just junk it's not required," said study co-author Victor Albert, a molecular evolutionary biologist at the University of Buffalo in New York.

While the findings, published Sunday in the journal Nature, concern acarnivorous plant, they could have implications for the human genome as well. Genes make up only 2 percent of the human genome, and researchers have argued in recent years that the remaining 98 percent may play some hidden, useful role. [Image Gallery: Amazing Carnivorous Plants]

Trash or treasureFor decades, scientists have known that the vast majority of the genome is made up of DNA that doesn't seem to contain genes or turn genes on or off. The thinking went that most of this vast terrain of dark DNA consisted of genetic parasites that copy segments of DNA and paste themselves repeatedly in the genome, or that it consists of the fossils of once useful genes that have now been switched off. Researchers coined the termjunk DNAto refer to these areas.

"Nobody's really known what junk DNA does or doesn't do," Albert told LiveScience.

But in recent years, researchers have debated whether "junk" might be a misnomer and if this mysterious DNA might play some role. A massive project called ENCODE, which aimed to uncover the role of the 3.3 billion base pairs, orletters of DNA, in the human genome that don't code for proteins, found that in test tubes, about 80 percent of the genome seemed to have some biological activity, such as affecting whether genes turn on. Whether that translated to any useful or necessary function for humans, however, wasn't resolved.

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'Junk' DNA mystery solved

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