Friday, February 29, 2008

Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation Presents Mongolia Photo Exhibit

This is an email from GenealogiaMolecular.com

Message: Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation Presents Mongolia Photo Exhibit, Lecture at Downtown Salt Lake City Library
People Living in Remote, Rarely Visited Locations in Central Asian Crossroads of Mongolia Provide Critical Ancestry Clues During a Time Before Most Written Genealogies Begin. Month-Long Mongolia Photo Exhibit and One-Night Presentation Offer Public Insights from Non-Profit Scientific Organization's Study of Humankind's Genetic Family Tree.

SALT LAKE CITY & ULAANBAATAR, MONGOLIA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation (SMGF), a non-profit scientific organization that has created the world's most diverse and comprehensive collection of genetic genealogy, today announced the opening of a month-long exhibit of 30 photographs from its recent genetic genealogy expeditions to remote, rarely visited locations in Mongolia. Along with the photo exhibit will be a one-night program featuring a lecture by geneticist Dr. Scott Woodward and remarks from the Consul General of the Mongolian Embassy in Wash., DC.

The photo exhibit, which runs March 1-April 1, 2008, is entitled "From The Land Of Genghis Khan: Photographs From the Mongolian Genetic Genealogy Collection Expeditions of the Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation." Both the exhibit and the lecture are open to the public and will be held in the Lower Urban Room of the downtown Salt Lake City Public Library at 210 E. 400 South. The exhibit will open simultaneously at the National University of Mongolia in Ulaanbaatar.

On Friday, March 21, at 6 p.m., Woodward, who is executive director of SMGF and one of the world's leading genetic genealogy researchers, will offer a lecture and discussion that includes Gonchig Ganbold, Consul General of the Mongolian Embassy in Washington, DC and Malan Jackson, Honorary Consul of Mongolia in Utah.

The expeditions were a joint research effort of SMGF and the National University of Mongolia. More than 3,000 DNA samples and related multi-generation pedigree charts from individuals in each of the country's geographic regions, 24 separate ethnic groups and tribes, were collected. All exhibit photographs were taken by Edgar Gomez-Palmieri, director of international outreach for SMGF.

Study of the DNA and genealogy collections from Mongolians in May and August of 2007 may reveal important clues about the genetic flow of the human family through time. Data gathered during the expeditions provide a window into an important period immediately before most written genealogy begins, about 500-700 years ago. At that time, Mongolians, led by Genghis Khan and others, spread through much of Eurasia and the resulting interactions likely contributed a significant genetic component to human populations from eastern Europe through southeast Asia. The expeditions gathered and preserved evidence that represents a national treasure for Mongolia, which is undergoing a renaissance of national identity.

"It was a privilege for me to work on this genetic genealogy project with Mongolians whose rich history, family and clan names stretch back as far as the Tenth Century A.D.," said Gomez-Palmieri. "Our results will shed new light on the deep ancestry of many people curious about where they fit into the human family tree."

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