The Sanctuary
Society => News of the World => Topic started by: IIIII on September 07, 2014, 03:07:40 am
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It was Kosminski the polish hairdresser. He was suspected of being the Ripper at the time of the murders.
More about this here:
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2746321/Jack-Ripper-unmasked-How-amateur-sleuth-used-DNA-breakthrough-identify-Britains-notorious-criminal-126-years-string-terrible-murders.html#ixzz3CaQPIrlx>
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2746321/Jack-Ripper-unmasked-How-amateur-sleuth-used-DNA-breakthrough-identify-Britains-notorious-criminal-126-years-string-terrible-murders.html#ixzz3CaQPIrlx
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Well I just lost money.
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I think sometimes legends should just be left as they are, rather than some glory-hunting asshole spoiling the fun. I'd have kept the results to myself and quietly smiled on the inside; it's not as if this is going to feature on crimestoppers.
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Honestly a waste of resources
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That's all good and well, but unless these finds are peer reviewed by other scientists in the field i won't jump to conclusions.
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im not sure i believe the line that the scarf went this long with viable DNA
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im not sure i believe the line that the scarf went this long with viable DNA
DNA can exist for thousands and maybe millions of years.
As far as human genetic material goes, the record for oldest Neanderthal DNA is held by a 100,000-year-old sample found in a Belgian cave. The longest-lasting sample of human DNA was discovered in northeastern Spain, and boasts a survival age of 7000 years. In both cases, techniques pioneered by Dr. Rhonda Roby allowed researchers to use mitochondrial DNA rather than the type found in the cell nucleus; although mitochondrial DNA only contains only partial genetic information, it provides sufficient evidence for identification and is present in greater abundance than nuclear DNA, increasing its odds of surviving.
http://mentalfloss.com/article/48815/how-long-does-dna-last
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you missed the part where it is contingent on ideal circumstances. dna on a scarf, existing for decades in non-ideal circumstances, being continuously contaminated, is NOT the ideal circumstance that they were talking about.
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So many people were being killed off in England in those years that maybe the hairdresser did kill that hooker but the others were probably killed by others. These were the first murders that were highly covered by the media so a or many copy cat killers were highly probable
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you missed the part where it is contingent on ideal circumstances. dna on a scarf, existing for decades in non-ideal circumstances, being continuously contaminated, is NOT the ideal circumstance that they were talking about.
You missed the part where readable human DNA was found in a Belgian cave after 100,000 years.
Or maybe you are of the opinion that the floor of a cave meets your idea of an ideal condition for preserving DNA.
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you missed the part where it is contingent on ideal circumstances. dna on a scarf, existing for decades in non-ideal circumstances, being continuously contaminated, is NOT the ideal circumstance that they were talking about.
You missed the part where readable human DNA was found in a Belgian cave after 100,000 years.
Or maybe you are of the opinion that the floor of a cave meets your idea of an ideal condition for preserving DNA.
Actually yes
Those caves you're refering to are very dry and arid and the sediments were that DNA was discovered weren't disturbed since the day it came to be there. They discovered a homo sapian from the last ice age around 10 000 bc, in switzerland in a glacier and were able to recover its DNA and most people i living in that country are decendants.
Those are two examples are ideal conditions.