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Professor Stephen Oppenheimer

Stephen Oppenheimer is a world-recognised expert in the synthesis of DNA studies with archaeological and other evidence to track ancient migrations. He is a member of Green College, Oxford University.
 
While working in New Guinea in the early 1980’s he was the first to notice anti-malarial protection conferred by a-thalassaemia, a mild inherited blood disorder. This genetic disorder shadowed the spread of Polynesians out to the Pacific. That research subsequently led to his focus on the use of genetic markers to track migrations.
stephen oppenheimer

His first book Eden in the East: The Drowned Continent of Southeast Asia challenged the orthodox view of the origins of Polynesians as rice farmers from Taiwan and was widely acclaimed. Oppenheimer’s paradigm change, using a synthesis of genetics, archaeology, geology and linguistics, has since been endorsed by reviewers in Science. Out of Eden has been the subject of a Channel 4 programme of the same name and a Discovery Channel film ‘The Real Eve’.

Stephen Oppenheimer’s work forms the basis of the Journey of Mankind genetic map that can be viewed on this website.

Stephen Oppenheimer's latest book Origins of the British - A genetic Detective Story was recently released in October 2006. Anyone interested in knowing the identity and distribution of their male founding cluster as described in Stephen Oppenheimer's  book "The Origins of the British" may use the following link to have their Y chromosome tested for this. He is a member of the Bradshaw Foundation Advisory Board.



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