Mitochondrial and Y-chromosome DNA are wonderful things. Since we inherit them from only one parent (mitochondrial DNA coming from our mothers, and Y-chromosome DNA coming from our fathers–if we happen to be male), they allow us to figure out how people are or aren’t distantly related.
The first time the existence of such genetic family-tree tracing broke into public consciousness was a number of years ago when evidence of a “mitochondrial Eve”–a woman from whom all living humans are descended–was reported. That story has been kicked around a number of times, but it’s still being taken seriously in scientific circles.
The same kind of genetic research has the potential to solve other historical puzzles. One that I’ve been waiting for lo these long years is word about where the so-called ten “lost tribes of Israel” ended up. There is some genetic evidence indicating that some of them ended up in Africa, but I’m still waiting for a fuller picture.
Now there’s evidence (which is really just the last nail in the coffin) for where they didn’t end up, and it’s bad news for the Mormon Church. Ever since the Book of Mormon was written, Mormons have held that the American Indians were descendants of immigrants from Israel.
Just as it’s possible to find a lost tribe with DNA evidence, it’s also possible to lose one.
Anthropologists have long-maintained, and genetic studies are confirming, that American Indians are descendants of immigrants from East Asia, not the Middle East. A new book by a former Mormon bishop now explores the matter, and he admits where the evidence points.
Mormon apologists have seen the handwriting on the wall on this one for some time, and they have been doing what Mormon apologists typically do when faced with scientific evidence contary to historic Mormon belief: change their claims.
Still, it’s not good for the folks in Salt Lake.




