A new method of establishing hair and eye colour from modern forensic
samples can also be used to identify details from ancient human remains,
finds a new study published in BioMed Central's open access journal
Investigative Genetics. The HIrisPlex DNA analysis system was able to
reconstruct hair and eye colour from teeth up to 800 years old,
including the Polish General Wladyslaw Sikorski (1881 to 1943)
confirming his blue eyes and blond hair.
A team of researchers from Poland and the Netherlands, who recently
developed the HIrisPlex system for forensic analysis, have now shown
that this system is sufficiently robust to successfully work on older
and more degraded samples from human remains such as teeth and bones. The system looks at 24 DNA polymorphisms (naturally occurring variations) which can be used to predict eye and hair colour.
Dr Wojciech Branicki, from the Institute of Forensic Research and
Jagielonian University, Kraków, who led this study together with Prof
Manfred Kayser, from the Erasmus University Rotterdam, explained, "This
system can be used to solve historical controversies where colour
photographs or other records are missing. HIrisPlex was able to confirm
that General Wladyslaw Sikorski, who died in a plane crash in 1943, had
the blue eyes and blond hair present in portraits painted years after
his death. Some of our samples were from unknown inmates of a World War
II prison. In these cases HIrisPlex helped to put physical features to
the other DNA evidence."
For medieval samples, where DNA is even more degraded, this system
was still able to predict eye and hair colour (for the most degraded DNA
samples eye colour alone), identifying one mysterious woman buried in
the crypt of the Benedictine Abbey in Tyniec near Kraków, sometime
during the 12th-14th centuries, as having dark blond/brown hair and
brown eyes.
Source:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/01/130113201136.htm

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