Lately I have become interested in how DNA can be used in Genealogy.
There is a lot of interesting information out there on the internet about it,but
like anything else one has to be alert and careful.
Mostly DNA is used to match people with the same surnames to see if they have any definite relationship.Although it has also been used to solve some
historical conundrums such as wheter or not the body buried at the James farm in Missouri was in fact that of the legendary outlaw Jesse James.
Mtdna tests confirmed the body's identity(a comparison was run of examples from the remains and those of descendants of James' maternal line and a match was found).
Sometimes though mistakes can be made,for example the case of the Florida
professor that was mistakenly claimed to be a descendant of Genghis Khan.
(While his Y-DNA DID show Central Asiatic ancestry it did not in the end
match with Genghis Khan's.)
Another more infamous example was Oprah's declaration that she was of
Zulu descent despite the fact that the Zulu nation never existed during the period when her ancestors were being transported to America and is in
fact a lingua-cultural group and not an ethnic one.
Despite this DNA can be useful when it comes to genealogy when correctly
used.