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This paper was published in Answers Research Journal around a month ago, and as far as I can tell there hasn't been any mainstream response to it yet. According to the paper (by Nathaniel T. Jeason), when one compares the diversity of mitochondrial DNA in non-African people to the mutation rates of mitochondrial DNA, it is most consistent with non-African people diverging from an ancestor around six thousand years ago.
The most recent issue of the Journal of Creation has a paper by Jeffrey Tomkins using different methods to reach a similar conclusion. This paper was featured on the journal's cover, so the journal editors evidently think it's a particularly big deal, but I haven't been able to find the paper online anywhere. If anyone here wants to look for it, the citation is: Tomkins, J. P. 2015. “Empirical Genetic Clocks Give Biblical Timelines.” Journal of Creation 29 (2): 3–5.
Now that most parts of Talk.Origins are no longer updated, we probably can't expect these papers to receive any response there. Can anyone at this forum find any flaws in the two papers' methods?
The most recent issue of the Journal of Creation has a paper by Jeffrey Tomkins using different methods to reach a similar conclusion. This paper was featured on the journal's cover, so the journal editors evidently think it's a particularly big deal, but I haven't been able to find the paper online anywhere. If anyone here wants to look for it, the citation is: Tomkins, J. P. 2015. “Empirical Genetic Clocks Give Biblical Timelines.” Journal of Creation 29 (2): 3–5.
Now that most parts of Talk.Origins are no longer updated, we probably can't expect these papers to receive any response there. Can anyone at this forum find any flaws in the two papers' methods?