‘Kiss baby for me’: First use of DNA to link Franklin expedition sailor to descendant
Canadian archeologists have used DNA analysis to identify the remains of a Franklin expedition sailor and to link him with his modern-day descendants.
“The news came by email and I was at work,” said Jonathan Gregory of Port Elizabeth, South Africa, the great-great-great-grandson of John Gregory, whose remains were found on King William Island in Nunavut.
“I literally needed to hold on to my seat when I was reading.”
It’s the first time genetics have been used to identify any of the 129 officers and crew on the expedition, which was lost in the Arctic in 1848 while searching for the Northwest Passage. The men’s fate has given rise to one of the North’s most enduring mysteries, now slightly less so.