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The only other bit of solid evidence left by the Colonists were
the carvings “ the colony instead moved to the south to This project intends to take a different approach to the research
problem. Believing that every good theory deserves consideration, there
is one in particular that we now have the ability to investigate by
employing Genetics. One of the most popular theories surrounding the
mystery of the Lost Colony is that the colonists had assimilated into one
(or more) of the local Indian tribes. This would be in keeping with a
number of contemporary accounts of
sightings of unusual Indians that had more European features than Native
American, as well as a variety of reports received in The technology of choice for this project is Y-chromosome DNA testing.
This is because the Y-chromosome (or Ycs) has an important genealogical
use in that the chromosome is passed strictly from fathers to sons and
remains essentially unchanged over the generations. All males carry the
Y-chromosome of their father, and they from their father, and so on,
throughout the history of the male line. Just as the Y-chromosome follows
the male line, so do surnames. For this reason, the Native American
assimilation theory can now be put to the test in a scientific way. The
idea, in a nutshell, is that the Y-chromosome of Native Americans can be
compared with men of English descent who also have the surnames of the
colonists. We would not expect to find the same Y-chromosome in both
groups. But if we do, it would confirm that they shared a common male
ancestor. We could then begin a genealogical investigation to exclude the
possibility of a later introduction of
the Y-chromosome into the family line. Although this is a very
scaled down version of the actual testing process, it does provide the
reader with an introduction to the goals of the project. If you are
interested in learning more about the project and how you, or someone you
know, might participate, please follow the various links on this page or
if you want to know why the “Lost Colony” may not be so lost, you can read
some of the evidence here. If you are interested in possibly
participating in the project, please read the notes under News
& Details before contacting me. We have been left with very few facts to aid the research effort.
Archaeological and record evidence has been sparse. No skeletal remains of
consequence have ever been found to indicate that the colonists had
perished in a massacre perpetrated by either the Indians or the Spanish
as some have suggested. All available evidence suggests that there had
been an orderly departure from the colony. The colonists had taken the
time to pull down the structures which had been erected and had even
taken time to bury the belongings of Governor John White as they had
agreed to do before he departed for England to inform Ralegh and the
colonies sponsors that the colony had been seated at Roanoke Island
instead of further to the north along the Chesapeake Bay as they had
intended. For over 400 years, the story of the 1587 Colony at |