Genealogy Roundup, September 28
In this week's Roundup: A tombstone which, according to the photographer has become "a local legend around Salt Lake City," and a soldier accounted for from the Korean War.
In this week's Roundup: A tombstone which, according to the photographer has become "a local legend around Salt Lake City," and a soldier accounted for from the Korean War.
In this week's Roundup: A great new research tool plus how life stories of enslaved people became "crucial to a legal battle over a Louisiana petrochemical facility that could triple residents’ exposure to carcinogens."
In this week's Roundup: A generation of Europeans, adopted as children, is now returning to Sri Lanka to search for their birth mothers; finding lost military personnel in the ocean, free research tools for genealogists, and more.
In this week's Roundup: Celebrities explore how their grandparents navigated global conflicts
In this week's Roundup: How to live with your digital doppelgängers, the future of handwritten text recognition, seeking dual citizenship, 2030 census design, and more.
In this week's Roundup: 5 places that are special to Irish-Americans, reading the hidden stories in the U.S. Census, bringing the stories of enslaved people out of the shadows, and much more.
In this week's Roundup: What bones tell a bioarchaeologist about human life spans in pre-modern times, our ancestors weren't that different from us, happy little search tools, and more.
In this week's Roundup: "Thanks to a group of scientists at Stanford Medicine [and their new 5-hour DNA sequencing technique], the elusive same-day diagnosis may finally be within reach."
In this week's Roundup: A soldier lost in World War II has been accounted for, that feeling when you find out you're researching a relative, and more.
In this week's Roundup: Hatfield-McCoy family reunion, Who Do You Think You Are? news, and police use of genetic genealogy