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Criticism of Mormonism/Books/Losing a Lost Tribe: Native Americans, DNA, and the Mormon Church/Chapter 9: Difference between revisions

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[[fr:Specific works/Losing a Lost Tribe: Native Americans, DNA, and the Mormon Church/Index/Chapter 9]]
[[fr:Specific works/Losing a Lost Tribe: Native Americans, DNA, and the Mormon Church/Index/Chapter 9]]

Revision as of 05:50, 24 May 2010



A FAIR Analysis of:
Losing a Lost Tribe: Native Americans, DNA, and the Mormon Church
A work by author: Simon G. Southerton

Claims made in "Chapter 9: The Outcasts of Israel"

120

Claim
  • We should expect the common culture, history and ancestry to be revealed in the genes of the lost 10 tribes and those of the kingdom of Judah if they are actually related.

Author's source(s)
  • No source given.
Response

128-129

Claim
  • The Lemba can be genetically tied to the line of Aaron.

Author's source(s)
  • Webber Ndoro, "Great Zimbabwe," Scientific American, Nov. 1997, 62-67.
  • Tudor Parfitt, Journey to the Vanished City: The Search for a Lost Tribe of Israel, 1997.
  • Thomas, et al., "Y Chromosomes Traveling South: The Cohen Modal Haplotype and the Origins of the Lemba 'Black Jews of Southern Africa'," American Journal of Human Genetics 66:674-86 (2000).
  • Ezra 2꞉35
Response
The work repeats itself on p. 128-129 and 190.

129

Claim
  • In Mesoamerica, there is no genetic support for European lineages.

Author's source(s)
  • No source given.
Response