From Deseret News archives:
Utah project to link DNA, genealogy
Genetic markers may help Web users find kin
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Woodward said the information provided through the database protects the identity of people currently living. If someone finds matching genetic markers and retrieves a paternal pedigree chart through the database, only people who lived prior to 1900 will show up on the chart. There are many reasons for that, he said, including the possibility that people who believe they are children or grandchildren of specific people will find their parentage lies elsewhere.
Sorenson isn't particularly concerned with such revelations, he said, believing truth will ultimately come out and that understanding the truth better serves those who are seeking to definitively establish their ancestral lines. He sees his work as an extension of science but acknowledges there is an additional motivation because of his faith.
Sorenson himself is a Latter-day Saint, as are Woodward and many others employed by the foundation. "It's a 'turning the hearts'-type process, and a lot of people working here are working on the basis that they feel something more than just a test-tube study."
But science is at the forefront, he maintains.
"Genomics is the big deal" in the future of family history research, he said. "It's huge. We're fortunate to have some platform work done by the Mormon Church, but if we were trying to make this simply an LDS phenomenon, we would lose the rest of the world."
E-mail: carrie@desnews.com
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