Scurvy, hypothermia and cannibalism: DNA sheds light on victim of Northwest Passage expedition

Two Canadian researchers used DNA extracted from a molar to identify Capt James Fitzjames of the doomed 1845 expeditionFor more than a century, the bones of sailors who joined polar explorer Sir John Franklin’s ill-fated Northwest Passage expedition lay scattered on the rocky shores of an Arctic island. Weatherbeaten and bleached, nearly a quarter of the anonymous remains bore the marks of cannibalism, reflecting a grim coda to the famed expedition.Now, one of those men has been identified as Capt James Fitzjames from London, a discovery stemming from years of study by researchers at two Canadian universities, who isolated his DNA from a single molar and traced it to living relatives. Continue reading...

Scurvy, hypothermia and cannibalism: DNA sheds light on victim of Northwest Passage expedition

Two Canadian researchers used DNA extracted from a molar to identify Capt James Fitzjames of the doomed 1845 expedition

For more than a century, the bones of sailors who joined polar explorer Sir John Franklin’s ill-fated Northwest Passage expedition lay scattered on the rocky shores of an Arctic island. Weatherbeaten and bleached, nearly a quarter of the anonymous remains bore the marks of cannibalism, reflecting a grim coda to the famed expedition.

Now, one of those men has been identified as Capt James Fitzjames from London, a discovery stemming from years of study by researchers at two Canadian universities, who isolated his DNA from a single molar and traced it to living relatives.

Continue reading...