Nat Geo Education Blog

Wednesday Word of the Week: Haplogroups

| 1 Comment | No TrackBacks
Haplogroups: [human geography]
Noun: branches on the tree of early human migrations and genetic mutations of "markers" found on the Y chromosome (NatGeoEd.org); the study of haplogroups is commonly used to define genetic populations.(Reference.com)

2011-02-07_1030627.JPGAll humans belong to a halpogroup, this enables geneticists to follow the ancestry of ancient humans all the way to the present day.  Inspired by the "tree" of human life, National Geographic and partners embarked on the Genographic Project. The Genographic Project studies where our early human ancestors came from and how humans came to populate the entire planet. Following genetic markers through thousands of human generations enables scientists to track our human origins back to Africa and to determine the pattern of routes by which humans migrated around the world. Researching the characteristics and journeys of specific haplogroups can help students understand how people from distant places are genetically related. (www.natgeoed.org)
2008-08-21_0000129.JPGNational Geographic Education has partnered with the Genographic Project to develop educational materials about this fascinating scientific research. Bring the conversation of Haplogroups to your classroom through our interactive activities for students. All activities are aligned with the National Standards for Geography Education, which are outlined under the "Objectives" tab of each lesson plan. Student activity resources include:

The Wednesday Word of the Week is just one way to start expanding the breadth of your geographic vocabulary. Some words you'll recognize, and some will be new. Regardless of whether you know the word or not, we at National Geographic Education challenge you to use our words of the week.  Whether in the classroom, in everyday conversation, through the arts, or simply by checking out our provided links, we encourage you to make great use of our words in creative ways!
E-mail us with questions, concerns, suggestions or stories of how you have put "Haplogroups" to use in your daily life! NatGeoEd@ngs.org
--Julia from My Wonderful World

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://blog.mywonderfulworld.org/admin/mt-tb.cgi/7862

1 Comment

Julia,

Have you heard of a geography board game based on mtDNA lineage and haplogroups? I am designing and building one for my family's christmas present this year and am wondering what's out there already.

Dorian

Leave a comment

Blog Home
Campaign Home
About the Campaign
Join the Campaign
 

Archives

National Geographic Education strives to teach people how to care for the planet, its resources, and its inhabitants. Follow us for extreme learning!

About Our Bloggers

Caban

Sarah Jane is manager of social media for National Geographic Education more..
Mickey

Mickey is a senior at Virginia Tech studying geography and environmental analysismore..
Lori

Lori is a high school biology and ocean science teacher from Alabama more..
Doug

Doug is a geologist and an expert in underwater exploration technology more..
Shannon

Shannon is a writer and photographer whose work focuses on ocean conservation more..
Jane

Jane is an anthropologist working with the Baining people of Papua New Guinea more..
  Subscribe to RSS feed
  Find us on Facebook
   Find us on YouTube

Enter your email address:


Twitter Updates

Recent Comments

  • Dorian: Julia, Have you heard of a geography board game based read more


MyWonderfulWorld Tshirt