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Z Franklinova expedice

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  • Franklin expedition descendant feeling pride, sorrow after DNA match with sailor
    Bog Weber. CTV News, 26.9.2024
    Interview with Nigel Gambier, a relative of James Fitzjames. Nigel Gambier provided a DNA sample that allowed one of the jaws from King William Island to be identified as belonging to James Fitzjames.
  • First Fitzjames newsletter
    Fabiënne Tetteroo. Captain James Fitzjames, 27.9.2024
    The reaction of the researcher who tracked down a living relative of James Fitzjames, enabling the identification of his skeletal remains, to this identification.
  • On the finding of James Fitzjames
    Russell Potter. Visions of the North, 26.9.2024
    A reflection on the significance of the discovery and further lines of enquiry.
  • Identification of a senior officer from Sir John Franklin’s Northwest Passage expedition
    Douglas R. Stenton, Stephen Fratpietro, Robert W. Park. Journal of Archaeological Science, Reports, 24.9.2024
    Comparison of Y-chromosome profiles from a tooth recovered from King William Island and a buccal sample from a donor descended from one of the expedition’s senior officers lead authors to identification of remains as those of Captain James Fitzjames, HMS Erebus.
  • Missing Planks
    David C. Woodman. Aglooka - Long Strider, 1.5.2024
    A detailed analysis of Inuit testimony about the discovery of the ship of the Franklin expedition, in which they made a hole and sank it. This scenario does not correspond to the state in which HMS Erebus and HMS Terror were discovered. The author proposes two explanations: either that it was in fact a boat, or that the described event took place much earlier. It could be the ships of the disappeared Knight's expedition (1719 - after 1721+), whose goal was also to discover the Northwest Passage.