Over the last 35 years, researchers from the Laboratory of Biological Anthropology at the University of Kansas have been working with Mennonite communities to better understand evolutionary patterns of fission-fusion in relationship to their genetic history and population structure. In this study, short tandem repeat (STR) markers from the nonrecombining region of the Y chromosome (NRY) provided increased resolution of the molecular population structure for these groups. NRY is known to be informative for determining paternal genetic ancestral patterns in recently derived human populations. Mennonites represent a branch of the Anabaptist movement that began in northern and central Europe in the 16th century and maintain a well-documented mi...
A population of German-speaking Mennonites in Mexico has accumulated a random inbreeding coefficient...
The Y chromosomes of 549 individuals from Siberia and the Americas were analyzed for 12 biallelic ma...
We examined genetic variation on the nonrecombining portion of the Y chromosome (NRY) to investigate...
Over the last 35 years, researchers from the Laboratory of Biological Anthropology at the University...
Over the last 35 years, researchers from the Laboratory of Biological Anthropology at the University...
This is the published version. Copyright 1989 Wayne State University Press.We describe the gene freq...
We examined mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation in six Mennonite communities from Kansas (Goessel, L...
Old Order Mennonite communities initially arose in Northern Europe (centered in the Netherlands) and...
Anabaptist history is a chronicle of repeated migrations, fissions, and fusions of various subgroups...
Mennonites are Anabaptist communities that originated in Central Europe about 500 years ago. They in...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41465452
This is the published version. Copyright 1989 Wayne State University Press.The Anabaptist Amish, Hut...
We describe a large genealogy data base, which can be searched by computer, of 295,095 Amish and Men...
To scrutinize the male ancestry of extant Native American populations, we examined eight biallelic a...
A population of German-speaking Mennonites in Mexico has accumulated a random inbreeding coefficient...
The Y chromosomes of 549 individuals from Siberia and the Americas were analyzed for 12 biallelic ma...
We examined genetic variation on the nonrecombining portion of the Y chromosome (NRY) to investigate...
Over the last 35 years, researchers from the Laboratory of Biological Anthropology at the University...
Over the last 35 years, researchers from the Laboratory of Biological Anthropology at the University...
This is the published version. Copyright 1989 Wayne State University Press.We describe the gene freq...
We examined mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation in six Mennonite communities from Kansas (Goessel, L...
Old Order Mennonite communities initially arose in Northern Europe (centered in the Netherlands) and...
Anabaptist history is a chronicle of repeated migrations, fissions, and fusions of various subgroups...
Mennonites are Anabaptist communities that originated in Central Europe about 500 years ago. They in...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41465452
This is the published version. Copyright 1989 Wayne State University Press.The Anabaptist Amish, Hut...
We describe a large genealogy data base, which can be searched by computer, of 295,095 Amish and Men...
To scrutinize the male ancestry of extant Native American populations, we examined eight biallelic a...
A population of German-speaking Mennonites in Mexico has accumulated a random inbreeding coefficient...
The Y chromosomes of 549 individuals from Siberia and the Americas were analyzed for 12 biallelic ma...
We examined genetic variation on the nonrecombining portion of the Y chromosome (NRY) to investigate...