Originally posted by MsWeatherwax
					
						
						
							
							
							
							
								
								
								
								
								
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		Could the person who claimed that the other DNA did not come from semen please point to where this information was obtained--because the other expert who worked on that was quoted as saying it was semen from my reading and that he had to look for it deep inside the fabric.

 
	 
  
 
 
	 
		
	 
							
						 
							
						 Virtually anyone?  Did everyone in 19th Century London have the same mitochondrial DNA?  From my understanding, a full mitochondrial sequence could not be obtained from the blood on the shawl.  This often happens with ancient or degraded DNA.  However, a molecular geneticist would look at the rest and compare that to the full sequence of the living person.  It comes out as a long chain of numbers at various markers and, if there wasn't a close enough match, that would be quite obvious.  The mtDNA of Catherine Eddowes would already be known.  No bloody shawl necessary.  It would be exactly the same as her living maternal relative.  That is a given.
 Virtually anyone?  Did everyone in 19th Century London have the same mitochondrial DNA?  From my understanding, a full mitochondrial sequence could not be obtained from the blood on the shawl.  This often happens with ancient or degraded DNA.  However, a molecular geneticist would look at the rest and compare that to the full sequence of the living person.  It comes out as a long chain of numbers at various markers and, if there wasn't a close enough match, that would be quite obvious.  The mtDNA of Catherine Eddowes would already be known.  No bloody shawl necessary.  It would be exactly the same as her living maternal relative.  That is a given.
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