The Genographic Project maps the migratory history of humans and the genetic diversity of humans. National Geographic and IBM partnered in this global five year study in 2005.
The Genographic Project was founded by the National Geographic Society and IBM. No one man is credited with the foundation of the Project but instead the aforementioned corporate bodies.
The Genographic Project is seeking to chart new knowledge about the migratory history of the human species. Its predicting where we came from as well.
The genographic project analyzes human DNA to learn about where we came from. It also helps to show us our origin and prove the theories of Darwin and evolution.
the Genographic Project is a project aimed at in-depth analysis of the human genome to find our evolutionary origins. It uses distributed computing to allow anyone's computer to work with others in its analysis.
Check the link to the Genographic Project.
The National Geographic Genographic Project is a study that aims to map historical human migration patterns. They do this by collecting and analyzing DNA samples from hundreds of thousands of people from around the world.
A lot of evidence supports the theory that human beings originated in central Africa, and migrated out of Africa to the east in two major magrations very roughly 100,000 and 60,000 years ago. See the link to the Genographic Project.
A lot of evidence supports the theory that human beings originated in central Africa, and migrated out of Africa to the east in two major magrations very roughly 100,000 and 60,000 years ago. See the link to the Genographic Project.
A lot of evidence supports the theory that human beings originated in central Africa, and migrated out of Africa to the east in two major magrations very roughly 100,000 and 60,000 years ago. See the link to the Genographic Project.
What exactly do you have to do? Like a display?
Human kind developed in central Africa over the course of billions of years. Roughly sixty to one hundred thousand years ago, groups of humans began to migrate out of Africa toward the east and north. We spread out from there in a vast expanding migration until we reached all of the habitable places on the planet. Check the Genographic Project and send them a DNA sample (there is a cost) to learn about the journey your genes followed. I am not affiliated in any way with the Genographic Project, except that I have sent them my DNA.
There are some but exactly what they are is unclear.