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Researcher Claims 'Alien' DNA in Some Human Families

The unreviewed claims, based on legacy genotyping arrays, are prompting calls for independent high‑resolution validation.

Overview

  • Dr. Max Rempel reports that analysis of 581 families in the 1,000 Genomes Project found large DNA segments in 11 families that did not match either parent.
  • He says the anomalies include a cluster of 348 non‑parental variants, with some cases involving individuals born before modern gene‑editing tools existed.
  • Rempel also reviewed 23andMe results from people who self‑identify as alien abductees, stating that some families showed strings of non‑parental markers while others did not.
  • The results were posted by his DNA Resonance Research Foundation without peer review, and he is seeking access to whole‑genome or next‑generation sequencing to verify the signals.
  • Experts quoted in coverage urge caution, noting that contamination, cell‑culture artifacts, technical errors, limited samples or other terrestrial explanations could account for the findings.