The Seven Daughters of Eve
Author | ISBN 0-393-02018-5 | |
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The Seven Daughters of Eve
Following the developments of mitochondrial genetics, Sykes traces back human migrations, discusses the "
The title of the book comes from one of the principal achievements of mitochondrial genetics, which is the classification of all modern Europeans into seven groups, the
The last third of the book is spent on a series of fictional narratives, written by Sykes, describing his creative guesses about the lives of each of these seven "clan mothers". This latter half generally met with mixed reviews in comparison with the first part.[2]
Mitochondrial haplogroups in The Seven Daughters of Eve
The seven "clan mothers" mentioned by Sykes each correspond to one (or more) human mitochondrial haplogroups.
- Ursula: corresponds to Haplogroup U(specifically U5, and excluding its subgroup K)
- Xenia: corresponds to Haplogroup X
- Helena: corresponds to Haplogroup H
- Velda: corresponds to Sami people of northern Scandinavia: Swedish Sami (68%), Finnish Sami (37%) and Norwegian Sami (33%).[4]
- Tara: corresponds to Haplogroup T
- Katrine: corresponds to Haplogroup K
- Jasmine: corresponds to Haplogroup J
Phylogenetic tree of human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
L )
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
L0 | L1–6 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
L1
|
L2
|
L3
|
L4
|
L5
|
L6
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
M | N | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CZ
|
D | E | G | Q | O | A | S | R | I | W
|
X | Y
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
C | Z | B | F | R0
|
pre-JT | P | U
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
HV
|
JT
|
K | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
H | V | J | T |
Additional daughters
Sykes wrote in the book that there were seven major mitochondrial lineages for modern Europeans, though he subsequently wrote that with the additional data from Scandinavia and Eastern Europe, Ulrike (see below) could have been promoted to be the eighth clan mother for Europe.[5]
Others have put the number at 10
Likewise, Sykes has invented names for an additional 29 "clan mothers" worldwide (of which four were native American, nine Japanese
Reviews
Howy Jacobs in Nature labelled the book as semi-fictional with the majority of the information "the accounts of the imagined lives" of human ancestors. He commented: "All this made me feel that I was reading someone's school project, with influences from The Flintstones cartoon series, rather than a treatise by a leading academic."[2] Robert Kanigel in The New York Times asserted that inventing imaginary names and identities for ancient human ancestors is a fruitless endeavor, "neither solid theorizing nor fully realized fiction." He wrote: "Sykes's book is so fine, the science so well explained, the controversies so gripping, that it is painful to report that 200 pages into it the author performs a literary experiment that flops."[13]
Robin McKie in The Guardian concurred that the first part of the book is "an engrossing, bubbly read, a boy's own adventure", while the latter stories "try to pass off fiction as science."[14] Erika Hagelberg in Heredity said the book "aimed at the punter" and does not picture an "accurate account of an inspiring field of science;" commenting: "the tedious narrations of the lives of the clan mothers, lack of bibliography, and casual treatment of facts, rules the book out of the category of serious popular science."[15]
Editions
- ISBN 0-393-02018-5
References
- ISBN 978-0-393-02018-2. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
- ^ doi:10.1038/35095105.
- S2CID 40355653. Retrieved 2012-08-08.
- PMID 16985502.
- Sykes, Brian, Blood of the Isles (Bantam, 2006) pages 118-119
- ^ PMID 15254257.
- PMID 15382008.
- ^ Liddle, James W. (18 May 2005) mtDNA (Mitochondria) Tests Interpretation Team Liddle et al, Family Tree DNA group, Retrieved 13 November 2014
- PMID 12355353.
- ^ Japanese women seek their ancestral roots in Oxford Archived October 3, 2006, at the Wayback Machine by Tessa Holland, 25 June 2006, Kyodo News
- ^ Lane, Megan (2005-06-03). "Extreme genealogy". BBC News. Retrieved 2017-04-23.
- ^ Maternal Clan names[usurped], Oxford Ancestors web page, Retrieved 16 January 2020
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-10-15.
- ^ McKie, Robin (2001-05-27). "Observer review: The Seven Daughters of Eve by Bryan Sykes". the Guardian. Retrieved 2021-10-15.
- ISSN 1365-2540.