Biblical Genetics Dr. Robert Carter
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- Science
Biblical Genetics is a vlog/podcast by Dr. Robert Carter. His posts explore modern genetics through the lens of biblical history, and vice versa.
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What is a chronogenealogy?
In this third installment in our series on biblical genealogy, Dr Rob explains why the data in Genesis 5 and 11 are so important. These are not just lists of names. The added ages allows us to piece together a timeline of biblical history. Problem is, you can't directly connect the two passages. A several-year ambiguity is created when you try. There are other interesting factoids that pop out when one studies the chronogenealogies, so you will enjoy this episode much.
Links:
SCAPER (a creationist organization in Norway)
Undeland Mission farm
The biblical minimum and maximum age of the earth
Biblical chronogenealogies
LXX vs MT articles
Length of the Egyptian Sojourn -
Getting started with biblical genealogy
In this second installment on biblical genealogy, Dr Rob explains why all those names (or at least most of them) in the Bible are so important. This should be encouraging to anyone who struggles to read the Bible for comprehension.
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Intro to biblical genealogy, ancestor vs descendant trees
This is the first in a multi-part series on biblical genealogies. To understand what we are dealing with, we first need to know that there are two completely different types of name lists in the Bible. The first, an ancestor tree is easy. Ancestor trees are balanced and have a known number of people at each level. Even better, nearly all biblical ancestor trees only list fathers, so there is but one person at each level. The second, descendent trees, are the stuff of genealogical nightmares. Dr Rob makes it all easy.
Here are some helpful images.
Ancestor trees:
2. A descendant tree:
3. A mixed tree:
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What is the longest match between the human and chimpanzee genomes?
Human-chimpanzee similarity is a hotly-debated topic in the evolution-creation wars. Are we 98, 95, 90, or 85% similar? One way to get at the question is to ask what is the longest stretch of DNA that is shared between the two species. This is a very difficult question to answer! But, unperturbed, Dr Rob set out to answer it. Will our fearless hero be able to pull it off? Spoiler alert: not quite, but the path of discovery is still very interesting.
LastZ github.com/lastz/lastz
LastZ chaining github.com/hillerlab/make_lastz_chains
Mummer4 mummer4.github.io/
Blast blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi
Telomere-to-Telomere Consortium primate projects github.com/marbl/Primates
Python python.org/
Standard Bases:
A: Adenine
C: Cytosine
G: Guanine
T: Thymine (in DNA)
U: Uracil (in RNA)
Ambiguous Bases (IUPAC Codes):
These codes are used when there is ambiguity in the nucleotide present at a particular position:
R: A or G (puRine)
Y: C or T (pYrimidine)
S: G or C
W: A or T (Weak)
K: G or T (Keto)
M: A or C (aMino)
B: C, G, or T (not A) (B comes after A)
D: A, G, or T (not C) (D comes after C)
H: A, C, or T (not G) (H comes after G)
V: A, C, or G (not T) (V comes after U; U is replaced with T in DNA)
N: Any base (A, C, G, T) (N for any nucleotide)
Silver Comet Trail silvercometga.com/ -
Junk or Genius? How functional is the genome? Part 2
https://youtu.be/-jpoxCZgZKQ
Is the human genome highly functional or mostly junk? This is a question that is not only being asked in the creation-evolution debate; it is a question raging in the ivory tower as well. The 'old guard' is much more likely to resist any claim that large swaths of the genome are useful. The 'young punks' in science is more willing to accept the obvious fact that the genome is highly functional. Who is going to win? In this episode, Dr Rob puts a few more nails in the coffin of junk DNA..
Notes and links:'
Carter 2023 What proportion of the human genome is actually functional? And how much variation is tolerable?
Chen et al. 2023 A genomic mutational constraint map using variation in 76,156 human genomes
Moran 2023 What's in your genomes? 90% of your genome is junk -
DNA - highly functional or mostly junk? Part 1
Is the human genome highly functional or mostly junk? This is a question that is not only being asked in the creation-evolution debate; it is a question raging in the ivory tower as well. The 'old guard' is much more likely to resist any claim that large swaths of the genome are useful. The 'young punks' in science is more willing to accept the obvious fact that the genome is highly functional. Who is going to win? In this episode, Dr Carter highlights four new studies that ratchet the argument toward high function.
Notes and links:'
Carter 2023 What proportion of the human genome is actually functional? And how much variation is tolerable?
Zhang et al. 2023 FOXP3 recognizes microsatellites and bridges DNA through multimerization
Walter 2024 Are non-protein coding RNAs junk or treasure?
Stepankiw et al. 2023 The human genome contains over a million autonomous exons
Chen et al. 2023 A genomic mutational constraint map using variation in 76,156 human genomes
Moran 2023 What's in your genomes? 90% of your genome is junk