Description
Ancestry.com has about six million DNA samples in its database. In a four-day sale late last year, they sold 1.4 million test kits.
In a short space of time, DNA mapping has raced from being the stuff of rarefied scientific research to an almost do-it-yourself process, achievable with a few decent wads of spit and around $100.
New Zealanders are leaping into the craze too, eager to learn more about their ethnic make-up and possibly discover some previously unknown relatives who have already taken the test.
But it's not all harmless fun. In this Superfad episode, genealogist Gail Wilson-Waring tells us people have been known to get an unwelcome shock about their lineage after seeing their results. And geneticist Dr Kate Neas explains how results that suggest a greater risk of certain diseases may be misleading.
Hosts Laura Walters and Katie Kenny ask: Are we comfortable with private companies holding DNA samples from many millions of people around the world?
Read more about the DNA mapping craze via the Superfad page on Stuff: stuff.co.nz/superfad
And join the Superfad Facebook group to share your thoughts on this trend, and others: https://www.facebook.com/groups/186422305302755/
Katie and Laura are hosting Facebook Live videos each Monday, where they will answer your questions, and take you behind the scenes: https://www.facebook.com/Stuff.co.nz/
Pimped-out tiny houses have been popping up all over the country.
The movement seems like a natural fit for Kiwis, harking back to our rural roots, but does that extend to urban settings?
In the final Superfad episode, hosts Laura Walters and Katie Kenny move in to a tiny house on the prarie....
Published 04/19/18
Pimped-out tiny houses have been popping up all over the country.
The movement seems like a natural fit for Kiwis, harking back to our rural roots, but does that extend to urban settings?
In the final Superfad episode, hosts Laura Walters and Katie Kenny move in to a tiny house on the prarie....
Published 04/19/18