earn mony

earn mony

DNA test results cause further confusion

ISLAMABAD: Results of about half of the DNA samples taken for matching came back on Friday. Instead of providing closure to the grieving families, many of the test results have revealed multiple matches for the samples collected.

                         All 152 passengers aboard the Airblue flight ED-202 were killed when the plane crashed in Margalla Hills near Islamabad on Wednesday morning last week. Many of the bodies were charred beyond recognition and the authorities asked relatives to provide blood and tissue samples to determine the identities of the remains.
                      Another senior official said that while nine of these samples were successfully matched and the bodies handed over to the relatives, the remaining 16 samples had multiple matches. “Some DNA samples matched more than three coffins,” the senior official revealed. He added that it would take more time to identify the remaining bodies.

                      However, another senior official, on condition of anonymity, said that the actual number of results was 30.
                     The government, he said, did not release information about the remaining five test results because no matches were found.

DNA Ancestry Test

Using the latest in genetic research from thousands of scientists world-wide we are now able to test specific areas of your DNA to give us a fascinating insight into your ancestors history. With our ancestry test we will know where they came from and where they traveled to over the past 150,000 years! Not only will you discover the birthplace of your ancestors using our DNA ancestry testing services, but the paths they took across unchartered territory and their unique discoveries, such as language, agriculture and tools which set them aside from others as they travelled from continent to continent over the course of human history.
                                                               Men have one X chromosome and one Y chromosome (the Y making them male). While women have two X chromosomes and no Y. It is the Y that is passed from father to son, to son, to son, etc...

DNA Testing: An Introduction For Non-Scientists

DNA is material that governs inheritance of eye color, hair color, stature, bone density and many other human and animal traits. DNA is a long, but narrow string-like object. A one foot long string or strand of DNA is normally packed into a space roughly equal to a cube 1/millionth of an inch on a side. This is possible only because DNA is a very thin string.

                                                            Our body's cells each contain a complete sample of our DNA. One cell is roughly equal in size to the cube described in the previous paragraph. There are muscle cells, brain cells, liver cells, blood cells, sperm cells and others. Basically, every part of the body is made up of these tiny cells and each contains a sample or complement of DNA identical to that of every other cell within a given person. There are a few exceptions. For example, our red blood cells lack DNA. Blood itself can be typed because of the DNA contained in our white blood cells.
                                         For example, to refer to a particular piece of DNA, we might write:  AATTGCCTTTTAAAAA.  This is a perfectly acceptable way of describing a piece of DNA. Someone with a machine called a DNA synthesizer could actually synthesize the same piece of DNA from the information AATTGCCTTTTAAAAA alone.  

DNA Testing: An Introduction For Non-Scientists

The explanation of DNA testing that follows is intended as an introduction to the subject for those who may have limited backgrounds in biological science.
                                               While basically accurate, this explanation involves liberal use of illustration and, in some cases, over-simplification. Although intended to be informative, this is brief and incomplete explanation of a complex subject. The author suggests consulting the scientific literature for more rigorous details and alternative views.