How Tutankhamun's DNA Became a Battleground 89
First time accepted submitter superboj writes "Everyone wants a piece of Egypt's most famous pharaoh, including the media, the Muslim Brotherhood and even the Mormon church. But while scientists have been trying to excavate his DNA and prove who he was — Egypt's turbulent politics have been making progress hard. Will experts be able to make a major discovery? And what happens if they do?"
Here's what I want to know... (Score:5, Funny)
Is he - or is he not - related to Steve Martin?
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Let's died at 19 ascended to the throne at age 10. married his sister.
Let's say starting around age 17 he slept with a different woman every week(like Bieber). That is a possible 100 different kids that go unacknowledged.
Of course officially he had two kids that were stillborn. born of incest, and married to your sister will do that.
So he had anywhere from 0-100 kids.
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The whole point of that incestuous marriages thing that was prevalent among the pharaohs was to keep the holy royal ancestry from spreading out of the family. Keep the family tree pruned to one branch, as it were. So he'd be much less likely to have a jillion modern descendants than the average Egyptian of his period.
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Glad somebody here is old enough to get my joke [youtube.com].
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Um tut sut (OK we've had two oblique references, let's see if anybody can grasp this one)
tl;dr (Score:4, Insightful)
Mitt Romney shares Goa'uld DNA with ancient Pharaoh.
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Jaffa were genetically altered humans made to have pouches to incubate baby Goa'uld. Straight up humans are required to actually 'host' a Goa'uld, and human babies born to Goa'uld hosts share some of the genetic memory of the Goa'uld parents if the implication was that Mitt Romney was evil due to sharing the Goa'uld DNA, then no it wouldn't be Jaffa.
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That's why I come to Slashdot. I didn't know that stuff and it clears up a lot of my unanswered questions. At last I can sleep nights.
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Yes, what does the cradle of the American Revolution know about true Americanism?
interesting story, shit website (Score:5, Interesting)
It's interesting how "important" this pharaoh is. He died really young. Realistically, his greatest historical accomplishment was simply not having his tomb raided by treasure hunters.
It's amazing how much bullshit is happening around this corpse. The Mormons want to identify if it was one of their ancient ancestors so they can posthumously baptize him. There's some kind of fear that he may have been a Jewish ancestor. Which would somehow make Egypt part of Israel. Then the geneticists are arguing over the validity of DNA testing of mummies. And the most bizarre thing is from some fuzzy screen captue of a computer monitor that was filmed in one of the Discovery channel documentaries. Since they won't release the data, some group is claiming that the screen capture proves that king Tut was actually Caucasian. Which has some Aryan group in a frenzy. And now with the mess in Egypt, further studies have been put on hole. It's like a bad 3000 year old joke.
Re:interesting story, shit website (Score:5, Informative)
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The BYU team has no interest in it from a religious perspective.
So... Are you saying that they are NOT Mormons or are you questioning their faith and calling them bad Mormons?
Being that BYU stands for Brigham Young University which is owned and operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
It is owned and operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and, excluding online students, is the largest religious university and one of the largest private universities in the U.S., with 34,000 on-campus students.[8][9][10]
Approximately 98% of the university's 34,000 students are members of the LDS Church, and one-third of its American students come from within the state of Utah.[11] BYU students are required to follow an honor code, which mandates behavior in line with LDS teachings (e.g., academic honesty, adherence to dress and grooming standards, and abstinence from extramarital sex and from the consumption of drugs and alcohol).[12] Many students (78% of men, 10% of women) take a two-year hiatus from their studies at some point to serve as Mormon missionaries.[13][14]
And being that it is first and foremost a religious institution.
BYU is thus considered by its leaders to be at heart a religious institution, wherein, ideally, religious and secular education are interwoven in a way that encourages the highest standards in both areas.[141] This weaving of the secular and the religious aspects of a religious university goes back as far as Brigham Young himself, who told Karl G. Maeser when the Church purchased the school: "I want you to remember that you ought not to teach even the alphabet or the multiplication tables without the Spirit of God."[142]
Tut tut tissue (Score:2)
The implication that proxy work is being done for these individuals is unfounded. If they were to do so for the ancient pharaohs, they certainly wouldn't need a tissue sample! That's just ridiculous. No, BYU is studying the genetics, fair and square.
You don't get how it works... (Score:3, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G... [wikipedia.org]
Members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believe that tracing family lineage is essential for special religious ceremonies that seal family units together for eternity. According to Mormons, this fulfills a Biblical prophecy stating that the prophet Elijah would return to "turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their fathers."[2]
They are actively fulfilling a Biblical prophecy ONLY by determining genealogical lineage AND then baptizing the dead.
Simply baptizing them just makes them Mormon. In the minds of the LDS followers.
Only the genealogically backed baptism, fulfills the prophecy of The Second ComingTM.
Kinda like those Texans and Israelis who are breeding red heifers in order to bring about the end of the world.
That's right! Both these groups are jerking off to the idea of Armageddon!
And yet no
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And we're not sure either! ;-)
"But of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only." - Matt 24:36-37, reaffirmed in D&C 49:7
But since it could be just about any time, there's no sense in being caught unprepared. As the saying goes, a broken clock is right twice a day. (not strictly true, but whatever) We'll be right eventually. Until then, people can just chalk it up to eccentricity.
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"That's right! Both these groups are jerking off to the idea of Armageddon!
And yet nobody is rounding them up into prisons and concentration camps under suspicion of conspiracy to kill everyone on the planet!
I know! Insane!"
They are left alone because they are harmless nuts. When they cease to be harmless they will be dealt with.
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Re: You don't get how it works... (Score:2)
I enjoy the Mormons and i enjoyed Ender's Game. Oh. If I am inclined I can enjoy being more poly the thou. And I admire the author of Ender's game. Yah.
Let us think for a bit. I think a bit of good sense is to be as nice to your OTHER as you can afford to be. Then your OTHER can maybe do something similar without worrying so much about being "dealt with".
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I think I am lacking context. I cannot tell if your post is profound, sarcastic, inane, or "pun-ny".
To give context back, one of the central tenets of our faith is given in AoF 1:11 - "We claim the privilege of worshiping Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all men the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may."
Thus, if someone is wholly opposed to my belief system, yet they still consider me a harmless nut, they will be capable of honoring my agency
Re: You don't get how it works... (Score:2)
Pooh. I was being fairly serious but a little too cryptic I suppose. I get tired of people running warfare using shills and trolls so everyone can know that my neighbor is more terrible that I am. The last straw was the "taken care of" threat in a parent.
Looking harmless can be safe. Being the most terrible around can be safe. We have not decided which works better.
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Oscrivellodds was trying to moderate the position of Denzacar by stages. Denzacar, on the other hand, seemed ridiculous, and I can't be sure just how serious he was trying to be*. I'm not worried so much about Oscrivellodds' post, as he was actively trying to move the conversation toward moderation and tolerance (or at least, live and let live). Even if he was being facetious, Denzacar's was a more dangerous post, as it contains actively wrong information, probably heard across some other church's pulpit
Re: You don't get how it works... (Score:2)
You seem a little too sane to be walking thru ./
And I confess I have not trained recently on your skill set. Bye for now.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G... [wikipedia.org]
That's right! Both these groups are jerking off to the idea of Armageddon!
And yet nobody is rounding them up into prisons and concentration camps under suspicion of conspiracy to kill everyone on the planet!
I know! Insane!
The Mormons are getting ready for an event prophesied to occur at an undetermined and unknowable future time, unlike the Iranians who are actively working to Implement it.
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They are actively fulfilling a Biblical prophecy ONLY by determining genealogical lineage AND then baptizing the dead. Simply baptizing them just makes them Mormon. In the minds of the LDS followers.
No, no, no, no, no.
http://mormon.org/faq/proxy-baptisms
Jesus Christ taught that baptism is essential to the salvation of all who have lived on earth (see John3:5). Many people, however, have died without being baptized. Others were baptized without proper authority. Because God is merciful, He has prepared a way for all people to receive the blessings of baptism. By performing proxy baptisms in behalf of those who have died, Church members offer these blessings to deceased ancestors. These individuals in the next life can then choose to accept or decline what has been done in their behalf.
You're missing a very, very key element here. Nobody is making anybody else Mormon. That would violate agency. Baptism is a covenant, like a contract. It is a two sided promise. It is valid if, and only if the deceased accepts it. Thus, they are NOT recorded as becoming Mormon, but as having had the saving ordinances performed on their behalf. It is up to them to decide whether the ordinance is valid or not.
This misunderstanding has lead to a lot of unnecessary anger (and heated rh
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They are actively fulfilling a Biblical prophecy ONLY by determining genealogical lineage AND then baptizing the dead.
Simply baptizing them just makes them Mormon. In the minds of the LDS followers.
Only the genealogically backed baptism, fulfills the prophecy of The Second ComingTM.
Kinda like those Texans and Israelis who are breeding red heifers in order to bring about the end of the world.
That's right! Both these groups are jerking off to the idea of Armageddon!
Like the rightwingers who want Obama to declare war on Russia to save Crimea from the hands of the no-longer Communists!
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And yet, it's an accredited institution of higher learning in which scientists work and publish scientific papers unrelated to their religion. Imagine that.
You can say the same thing about some Catholic and
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Being that BYU stands for Brigham Young University which is owned and operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
D'oh! All these years I've been thinking it was BYO University!
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"One of their geneticists is one of the top in the country..."
'And, according to the story, he built his rep on the extraction of DNA from an 80 million year old dinosaur fossil. Unfortunately the DNA turned out to be from a modern human.'
He's obviously one of the top 5000 geneticists.
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And, according to the story, he built his rep on the extraction of DNA from an 80 million year old dinosaur fossil. Unfortunately the DNA turned out to be from a modern human.
Well duh, didn't you ever watch "Barney"?
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I'm not denying their scientific acumen. It's obvious they are very adept at what they are doing. But the reason this program exists in BYU is to find proof that the native americans were really descended from a lost tribe of Jewish settlers who came to America. Even if the head of this program, who is a high ranking Mormon, isn't interested in this; the LDS would use this as a reason to posthumously baptize Tutankhamun.
Seriously, if your not a member of LDS, the idea of posthumously baptising is pretty whacka-loon and unsupported in any other religion I'm aware of, so what difference does it really make?
At Least when the Satanic Temple performed a Pink Mass at the gravesite of Fred Phelps’ mother,
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Re:interesting story, shit website (Score:5, Interesting)
After Akhenaten's death, Tutankhamun and his sister / wife, Ankhesenamun, were too young to rule so the vizier, named Ay, took over and basically tried to undo what Akhenaten had done. The "amun" at the end of the two children's names is significant - Amun was the most worshiped god of the old religion, Tut's father's god was called the Aten. Tut's birth name was Tutankhaten, and the change came with a lot of reversals of his father's religious policies.
For a long time Tutankhamun was believed to have been murdered, but I guess that's in dispute now. Regardless, we have a heartbreaking letter from just after his death sent by his sister / wife to the Hittite king. Remember that Ay, in his seventies, has been ruling the country unofficially for the last nine years, that Egypt was the most powerful country in the world at this time, that the Hittites were traditional enemies of Egypt, and that Ankhesenamun, now eighteen and alone, is the only surviving member of the pure royal bloodline. This is from memory, so don't get mad if it's slightly off:
My husband is dead and I have no sons. I understand that you have many - send me one of yours and I will marry him and make him king of Egypt. Never will I marry a servant.
I am afraid.
A Hittite prince was sent, and he and his retinue were murdered en route. The only other record that we have of Ankhesenamun is her name and Ay's written together in way that signifies that they were married. Ay becomes the next pharaoh, and she disappears after this.
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> Akhenaten's wife (not Tutankhamun's mother) was Nefertiti, who's bust is one of the most iconic symbols of Egypt.
Probably the second most famous of their imagery, second only to the gold helmet they ripped off from Battlestar Galactica.
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Incidentally, the Red Sea in the biblical account is a mistranslation - it's actually supposed to be the "sea of reeds." In other words, a marsh. This makes sense for a bunch of reasons, not the least of which is the fact that the Israelites lived in the delta region in Egypt,
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was Nefertiti, who's bust is one of the most iconic symbols of Egypt
I guess they don't call her Nefertiti for nothing.
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There's some kind of fear that [Tutankhamun] may have been a Jewish ancestor. Which would somehow make Egypt part of Israel.
With that kind of rationale, China would be somehow part of Mongolia
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King Tut's daddy created God (Score:1)
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Actually, his tomb was raided. How much they got away with, we'll probably never know, but not a great amount. When Carter entered the tomb, there were clear signs of repairs to the doorway ,and the interior was a jumbled mess, as if the place had been partly ransacked, and then a lot of stuff almost literally thrown back in - by inference by the equivalent of the Police.
Safe to say - if some pe
Possible outcome (Score:1)
_______________
No to beta
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That might be the case, but it might also not be the case.
worst article, ever (Score:2, Insightful)
this article, and the linked website are absolute shite.
What the fuck, Slashdot?
my stuff never gets posted, but shit like this does?
FFS.
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The website is an annoying mobile site, but the article has a lot of content. It goes into the backstory and history. It's significantly better than a two paragraph blog that only contains fluff or a Dice ad linking back to Slashdot.
I don't know what you try to post.
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That's just the beta of the rollback of the beta. It still has a few bugs in it. (The rollback).
Yet another case of nationalism getting in the way (Score:2)
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Aren't the Copts supposed to be the closest descendants of the ancient Egyptians?
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either everyone's ancester or nobodys (Score:3)
Conversely, even if Charlemagne is your proven ancestor, you may have no genes from him. You have about 42,000 genes, duplicate copies from each parent. After 16 generations, some ancestor must drop off the list of contributing genes. Probably much sooner because meiotic (germ cell)recombination appears operate on blocks of genes, not individual genes.
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This is kinda like how ALL Norwegians go back to Harald the Great. (I've forgotten the details but that's the gist of it.)
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Pour les Francais, quelque roi apres de Charlemagne.
For anglophone Americans ... we're back to the Dick and Johnny show again.
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Or might William the Conqueror be the major entry point for that line? Come to think of it, was he related to Charlemagne?
My ancestors on the Brit side were largely Welsh. So chances are I go back to some prince named Owain or Llewellyn as well. :)
[I'm actually an heir to a Welsh castle, should I cough up the million pounds or so in back taxes... of course, I've got competition from 6 or 7 generations of shirttail relations... Perhaps we should pool our funds. :D ]
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They were quite a bunch, eh? Fun times, if you were on the winning side!
The big difference seems to be that the northerners raped, pillaged, burned, then settled down and became reasonably good neighbors. The easterners (and by extension, the Normans) raped, pillaged, burned, and set themselves up as overlords.
Alas, the castle isn't really in habitable condition, even were I a rich lunatic willing and able to cough up the back taxes. Not irreparable, per the photos I've seen, but rather a ways from a turnke
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FTFY
Tut's Genome (Score:1)
Tutankhamen Dead? (Score:1)