Susan Sarandon’s daughter Eva Amurri strips for TV show

Melbourne, Sep 18 (ANI): It seems budding actress Eva Amurri is following in her mother Susan Sarandon’s footsteps, for she is playing the role of a student who turns to stripping in the latest series of US hit show ‘Californication’.

Sarandon was known for doing similar roles more than 20 years ago- in ‘The Hunger’ in 1983, she dropped her clothes for a controversial lesbian love scene with Catherine Deneuve and has never shied away from nudity in films.

And now Eva, 24- born from Sarandon’s relationship with an Italian director during the Eighties- is kick-starting her own acting career in a racy guest appearance on the show.

She stars as Jackie, a student who moonlights in a strip club, during the third season of the show starring David Duchovmy, reports the Daily Telegraph.

The show sees her writhing around Duchovmy’s college professor character Hank Moody, peeling off a corset to dance for him topless.

And later, she is shown at his place taking their relationship to the next level. (ANI)

CBI detaines CRPF DIG for irregularities in cops’ recruitment

New Delhi, Feb 25 (PTI) The CBI today detained a Deputy Inspector General of CRPF for his alleged involvement in irregularities in recruitment of constables in Uttar Pradesh. Vinod Sharma, a CRPF cadre officer, was detained by the agency late last night in Lucknow after conducting searches at his residence, CBI sources said.

The action against the DIG was taken after the investigating agency was tipped off by the CRPF itself about several complaints of irregularities. The CBI also raided the residence of a CRPF head constable, who was an accomplice of Sharma.

The recruitment of over 1,500 constables started nearly two months ago and the process was still on. There have been allegations that several candidates, who did not meet the set physical standards, were taken into the police force during the current recruitment process in which the DIG was the observer, they said.

PTI.

Yasin Malik weds his Pakistani girlfriend

Rawalpindi, Feb 22 (IANS) Kashmiri separatist leader Yasin Malik Sunday married his Britain-born Pakistani girlfriend Mushaal Mullick in this Pakistani garrison city.

The marriage ceremony was attended by a number well known people, including politicians, Pakistan’s Geo TV reported.

Mullick, a post-graduate from the London School of Economics and an artist, is the daughter of Rehana Hussain, chief of the Muslim League (women’s wing). Her father, the late M.A. Hussain Malik, was an internationally renowned Pakistani economist.

Yasin Malik, 40, chairman of the pro-independence Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front, met Mushaal during one of his tours to Pakistan two years ago.

The wedding dates were fixed during Malik’s current visit to Pakistan. The couple got engaged Oct 24 when the JKLF leader was in detention for launching a poll boycott campaign in Kashmir.

It was the third high-profile cross-border wedding in the Kashmiri separatist camp after Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, who married a US citizen of Kashmiri origin, and Sajjad Ghani Lone, who wed the daughter of JKLF supremo Amanullah Khan from Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
Indo Asian News Service

Top official abducted in Pakistan’s Swat Valley

Mingora (Pakistan), Feb 22 (IANS) Suspected Taliban militants Sunday abducted a top government administrator and six guards in Pakistan’s Swat Valley, officials said.

District administrator Khushal Khan was going in his car to Mingora, the main town of Swat, when he was abducted by the suspected militants, The News reported.

The abductors have also kidnapped six of Khan’s bodyguards who were accompanying the official.

Khan was transferred to Swat only two days ago.

The kidnappings have dealt a blow to the peace efforts in the region, as the government and Taliban militants have pledged a ceasefire in the region.

Pakistani authorities last Monday entered into a deal with Taliban militia to restore sharia, or Islamic law, for peace in Swat, a idyllic valley where Pakistani military has been engaged in an unending war with Islamist militants.

A journalist working for a local television channel and newspaper was abducted and killed Wednesday as he covered a ‘peace march’, led by radical cleric Maulana Sufi Mohammad who was freed by the government to negotiate peace with Taliban militants.

Last Sunday, Islamist militants announced a 10-day ceasefire in the valley as a ‘goodwill gesture’ towards the peace talks.

Pakistan said Saturday the government and the militants have agreed to a ‘permanent truce’, but a Taliban commander said their ceasefire would be reviewed on its expiry Wednesday.
Indo Asian News Service

Germany winner in “global attitudes” poll as China and Russia fade

Germany winner in London – Global attitudes towards Russia and China have changed for the worse over the past year as positive ratings for the US are on the rise for the first time since 2005, a poll published by the BBC World Service showed Friday.

As in previous years, Germany fared best in the poll, with every country viewing it positively, and 61 per cent of people rating it favourably, up from 55 per cent a year ago.

Britain also also moved up seven points, with 58 per cent of people rating it as having a positive influence.

Negative views about Russia jumped by eight points to 42 per cent among the 13,000 people questioned in 21 countries, while 39 per cent had a negative view of China’s role in global affairs.

The survey, conducted by the international pollster GlobeScan, was taken after the election of US President Barack Obama.

It showed that attitudes towards the US are gradually becoming more favourable, although 43 per cent of those asked still have a negative view of Washington’s impact on world affairs.

However, the US, for the first time since 2005, surpassed Russia in positive ratings, with an average of 40 per cent compared with 35 per cent last year.

The poll, in which GlobeScan cooperated with the Program on International Policy Attitudes (Pipa) at the University of Maryland, was carried out in the 10 weeks leading up to February 1.

In the same survey a year ago, in the same countries, people leaned more towards saying China and Russia were having a positive influence on the world, poll analysts said.

“Our poll results suggest that China has much to learn about winning hearts and minds in the world,” said GlobeScan chairman Doug Miller.

“It seems that a successful Olympic Games has not been enough to offset other concerns that people have,” he said.

The poll also suggests that substantially more people now have a negative view of Russia’s influence, which was judged negative by 42 per cent and positive by just 30 per cent.

“As for Russia, the more it acts like the old Soviet Union, the less people outside its borders seem to like it,” Miller said.

As was the case last year, Iran, Israel, Pakistan and North Korea were rated most negatively, the BBC said.

But the US is still rated negatively by 43 per cent of those polled. However, this is an improvement from 47 per cent 2008.

“Though BBC polls have shown that most people around the world are hopeful that Barack Obama will improve US relations with the world, it is clear that his election alone is not enough to turn the tide,” said Steven Kull, director of Pipa.

“People are still looking to see if there are significant changes in US policies.” (dpa)

Oxfam fears for Congolese civilians as fresh fighting looms

Oxfam fears for Congolese civilians as fresh fighting looms Nairobi/Goma – International charity Oxfam said Wednesday it was concerned for the safety of civilians in the Democratic Republic of Congo as Rwandan troops entered the country to hunt down Hutu militia formed after the 1994 massacre in Rwanda.

Several thousand Rwandan soldiers entered eastern DR Congo on Tuesday under an agreement with the Congolese government.

The soldiers headed north from Goma, the provincial capital of the unstable North Kivu province, to find the militia.

“Fighting three months ago, saw a quarter of a million people flee from their homes, and civilians killed, raped, and looted by all armed groups,” Juliette Prodhan, the head of Oxfam in DR Congo, said in a statement.

“This new twist … has the potential to result in similar abuse and significantly swell the 1 million people already displaced,” she added.

Congolese Tutsi rebel group the National Congress for the Defence of the People (CNDP) in October launched a major offensive that sent over 250,000 people fleeing.

The CNDP, which is allegedly backed by Rwanda, says it is fighting to protect the Tutsi population from the Hutu militia.

The Congolese government has promised to tackle the Hutu militia on several occasions, but has failed to do so. The CNDP says this is one of the main reasons it was forced to take up arms again.

Many of the Hutu fighters fled over the border from Rwanda in 1994 after taking part in the slaughter of an estimated 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus.

The Hutu groups were also involved in the 1998-2003 war in DR Congo, which has led to the deaths of over 5 million people and displaced over 1 million.

The 17,000-strong UN peacekeeping force MONUC is playing no role in the operation, which will be carried out by Rwandan and Congolese army forces.

MONUC struggled to contain the outbreak of violence last year and Oxfam said it was worried this situation would be repeated.

“The UN peacekeeping force is already overstretched and the 3,000 extra troops promised months ago have yet to arrive,” Prodhan said. “MONUC was not able to keep civilians saf … and without reinforcements, it is unclear that it will be able to now.” (dpa)

Kenya celebrates Obama inauguration

Nairobi – Tens of thousands of Kenyans celebrated Barack Obama’s inauguration at parties across the east African nation as images of their favourite son were beamed onto big screens.

Thousands gathered at a public viewing at Nairobi’s Kenyatta International Conference Centre, clapping and cheering as President Obama spoke.

In Kogelo, the Western Kenyan village where his late father grew up and where his grandmother still lives, residents slaughtered goats and bulls and feasted in Obama’s honour.

Earlier in the day, around 3,000 people gathered at a school in Kogelo to watch traditional dancers in brightly coloured costumes.

In nearby Kisumu, thousands danced into the evening as music blasted out from loudspeakers.

Parties were expected to continue late into the night as Kenyans, who often do not need much of an excuse to enjoy a few beers, take the chance to fete the new president.

Kenyans are fiercely proud of Obama, and the celebrations allowed people to forget their woes, which include a food crisis threatening 10 million people with starvation and memories of the ethnic clashes that killed over 1,500 people one year ago following disputed elections.

Many Kenyans, and indeed Africans, hope that President Obama’s Kenyan roots will help bring a new focus on the continent’s myriad problems.

At the very least, many say they feel a new sense of self-respect since a black American with humble roots in Kenya can reach the White House.

Kogelo has already seen concrete benefits, with electricity, water and road upgrades following Obama’s election.

The tiny Kisumu airport is also expected to be upgraded quickly to accommodate Air Force One should President Obama wish to fly in to visit his grandmother. (dpa)

Somali former president arrives in Yemen seeking political asylum

Sana’a, Yemen  – Somalia’s former Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, who resigned last month amid an internal power struggle, arrived in the Yemeni capital Sana’a Tuesday seeking political asylum, Yemeni officials and a Somali diplomat said.

Yemeni officials said Yusuf had expressed his wish to receive political asylum in Yemen until he decides a permanent residence.

A Somali diplomat said Yusuf was accompanied by his wife and 17 other family members and security guards upon his arrival in Sana’a.

“I think he wants to stay in Yemen for a short period, and then he might go to the United Kingdom for medical treatment,” the diplomat told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa, asking not to be identified.

“When he resigned, he mentioned Yemen as one of the countries in which he wished to live,” the diplomat said.

Yusuf resigned on December 29 after political infighting reached new heights when he defied parliament to sack Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein.

Somalia has been has been wracked by conflict since the 1991 ouster of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre.

The crisis deepened when Ethiopian forces invaded the country two years ago to help kick out a hardline Islamist regime, sparking a bloody insurgency that has killed over 10,000 civilians. (dpa)

Israeli President Peres says Obama inauguration “great day” for US

Jerusalem – The inauguration of Barack Obama as president of the United States is a great day for the US because his “most unusual hope and election, only ten years ago, would have been unimaginable,” Israeli President Shimon Peres said Tuesday.

“What made history ugly, unmistakably, was basically slavery and there were two sorts of slavery: men upon women and white upon black,” Peres said.

“In the 20th century there was a liberation of women. In the 21st century, there is a liberation of the other kind of slavery, of one colour upon another colour because of the difference in colour,” he said.

Peres said he prayed that Obama would be a great president because “if he will be a great President of the United States, he will serve all humankind, all nations and all persons.”

“You be a great American President today means to struggle for peace, to fight terror, to correct the environment, and to offer the young generation a better future,” Peres added. (dpa)

Gonzalez dumps Hewitt out in first round

Melbourne – Spain’s Fernando Gonzalez crushed the home hopes of Lleyton Hewitt as he dumped the former finalist out in the first round of the Australian Open 5-7, 6-2, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 on Tuesday.

The second-day shock at Melbourne Park derailed the 27-year-old Hewitt’s plans as he played his home major for the 13th time.

He had not lost in the first round at Melbourne Park since 2002. It is the first time since the 2000 Open that he has not been seeded at a Grand Slam.

The number 70 Australian underwent hip surgery in August and made his return to play a fortnight ago at the Hopman Cup.

He reached the quarter-finals last week in Sydney against David Nalbandian. (dpa)

Pacific unanimous on tough line on Fiji military, says New Zealand

Wellington – Leaders of Pacific island countries who will meet next week to decide whether to suspend Fiji’s military rulers from their 16-member regional forum are unanimous in their desire to see democracy restored there, New Zealand Prime Minister John Key said on Tuesday.

Key rejected charges by Fiji’s strongman leader, Commodore Voreqe (Frank) Bainimarama, who ousted the elected government in a bloodless coup two years ago, that New Zealand and Australia were bullying their smaller neighbour.

Forum leaders will meet in Papua New Guinea on January 27 to discuss sanctions against Fiji after Bainimarama reneged on a pledge to hold fresh elections and restore democracy by March.

Key said a range of options would be on the table, including suspending Fiji’s membership, which would be a first for the 37-year-old regional grouping.

“I think there’s a growing sense of frustration from Pacific leaders that the interim government needs to demonstrate that it’s serious about undertaking elections and we’re not seeing any demonstration at all of that,” Key told a news conference.

Bainimarama, who boycotted the forum’s annual summit last year, told a New Zealand radio station on Monday that he would not go to the Papua New Guinea meeting because of floods that ravaged his nation of about 930,000 people last week.

Key said there was widespread sympathy for the Fijian people, adding, “But realistically this was his opportunity to front up and given an explanation of the timetable and the roadmap towards restoring those elections.

“He’s certainly not strengthening his hand by failing to turn up.”

Key said there was no valid reason why an election could not be held this year. “We believe that Fiji has got to start demonstrating publicly and with a sense of legitimacy that they intend to restore the country towards democracy,” he said. (dpa)

Renault and Williams unveil new Formula One cars

Renault and Williams unveil new Formula One cars Portimao, Portugal – Renault and Williams unveiled their cars for 2009 Formula One season at presentations in Portugal on Monday.

The cars were rolled out at the Algarve Motor Park circuit at Portimao where F1 teams begin testing this week ahead of the season beginning March 29 in Melbourne, Australia.

Two-time world champion Fernando Alonso and Nelson Piquet Jr were joined by team boss Flavio Briatore to present the R28 which Renault hopes will mount a stronger challenge for the championship.

The colour scheme is in a more striking yellow and white with the name of new sponsors Total on the front and rear wings of the R29.

Williams test driver Nico Huelkenberg, meanwhile, wheeled out the team’s FW31 in an interim dark blue livery.

Both cars will be testing alongside those of rival teams McLaren, who put its MP4-24 on the Portimao circuit on Saturday, and Toyota, who ran its TF109 for the first time at Portimao on Sunday.

Testing continues in Portugal until Thursday. In neighbouring Spain, BMW Sauber will launch its F1.09 in Valencia on Tuesday.

Ferrari was the first team to unveil its new car – the F60 – for the 2009 championship with a presentation on the internet a week ago.

Like other Formula One cars, both versions have wider front wings and higher and narrower rear wings in line with new aerodynamic regulations.

The R29 also features the shark fin engine cover that the team used for most of the 2008 season which ended promisingly with Alonso winning two of the last four races.

Williams have retained Germany’s Nico Rosberg and Japan’s Kazuki Nakajima as race drivers as it seeks to improve on a disappointing 2008 season.

The car is in a temporary winter testing livery, with the final 2009 colour scheme set to be presented next month. (dpa)

Cotton mill shut down for 20 years to reopen on Monday

Cotton mill shut down for 20 years to reopen on Monday Around 4,000 employees are looking forward to a chance to get their jobs back at the JK Cotton mill in Kanpur, which closed 20 year ago and will re-open on Monday. The JK Group officials informed that most probably, the mill, which will re-open on Monday, will start functioning in full-swing in the next three months, since it needs to go under several repairs prior to it.

The mill was shut down by the management in May 1989, when a strike was announced by the workers, the closing down led to loss of jobs for around 4,000 workers.

Director of the mill, PK Saraf reported, “It has been a dream of JK Group founder G H Singhania to restore the lost grandeur of Kanpur and give back the lost jobs to mill workers even at this time of recession.”

Following an extensive maintenance and repair, the mill will restart producing fabric. Saraf also added that an amount of Rs 105 crore will be spent on its restoration.

In the meanwhile, it was informed by Sanjay Dubey, Manager of the mill that a registration counter will be opened in front of the mill for the former employees.

It was however, added by Mr. Dubey that the number of registered workers to be re-employed will be decided by the management later.

Microsoft violated law with IE on Windows, says EU

Microsoft violated law with IE on Windows, says EU Recently it was it formed by the European Commission that European competition law has been violated by Microsoft by including Internet Explorer with Windows.

It was also informed by the Commission that since Windows includes Microsoft’s own browser; the other browsers are prevented from competing with IE.

It should also be noted here that under the European law, IE’s inclusion is not made by the remedies put in place under the US government’s landmark 2002 antitrust settlement with Windows lawful.

Microsoft had agreed to separate IE from Windows and permit users to de-select IE as their chosen browser under that ruling.

The company received this ruling in a Statement of Objections from the Directorate General for Competition of the European Commission, which was issued following browser specialist Opera’s complaint with the Commission a year ago.

It was supposedly complained by Opera that Microsoft continued to abuse its leading position by tying its browser to Windows and by not following web protocols.

As of now a time period of two months has been given to Microsoft in which it has to issue a written response to the directorate general and can request a hearing.

“The company is studying the statement of objections and is committed to conducting its business in full compliance with European law,” said the company via a statement. IE with Windows has been included by Microsoft since 1996.

New Morgan pedal car is the ultimate kid’s trike

London – British sports car maker Morgan has come up with the ultimate toy for junior enthusiasts of the make – a pedal car based on the company’s original three-wheeler.

The Supersport Junior Pedal Car is a stylish replica built to 2/3 scale and uses materials such as aluminium to retain the legendary power-to-weight ratio of the full-size car. Morgan says the pedal trike is designed for 6 to 13-year-olds.

The mini-Morgan features three-speed transmission, working lights and suspension and will be built alongside the full-size models at the Malvern factory in southwest England.

Morgan says it will be building only 500 of the exclusive trike from August 2009 to mark the centenary of the company founded by vicar’s son HFS Morgan one hundred years ago.

The first Morgan three-wheeler made its appearance at the Olympia motor show in London in 1910 and went on to establish the reputation of the Worcestershire-based maker.

Prices for the pedal car start at 2,510 pounds (3,700 dollars) – for an extra 250 pounds customers can order the model with hand-stitched leather upholstery. (dpa)

Infosys net up 33% in Q3 at Rs 1,641 crore

Infosys net up 33% in Q3 at Rs 1,641 croreInfosys Technologies, India’s second largest software services exporter, reported that the company was able to earn consolidated net profit of Rs 1,641 crore for the Q3 that ended December 31, 2008 as against Rs 1,231 crore in the corresponding quarter a year ago.

A release which was issued to BSE today by Infosys, said, “The Q3FY09 topline has increased 35.5% to Rs 5,786 crore from Rs 4,271 crore in Q3FY08, beating the recession blues which is clouding the global businesses.”

The company registeredis an increase of 33% in the Q3 diluted EPS (Earnings Per Share) at Rs 28.63 as against Rs 21.47 a year ago.

Furthermore, the third quarter also saw an impressive rise in the operating profit by 45% at Rs 2,031 crore. It should also be noted that the net profit has moved up by 14.5 per cent while the topline has increased by 6.7 per cent on a sequential level.

During the Q3, the company was helped by the depreciating rupee even as it added 30 clients.

S Gopalakrishnan, CEO and Managing Director, Infosys Technologies reported, “In a challenging environment, our focus is on creating value for clients, running an optimized business, and evolving our business model that will allow us to emerge stronger when the global economy starts recovering.”

Japanese govt under fire for rewriting wartime history in school textbooks

London, Jan 9 (ANI): Japanese government is under attack for its apparent attempts to rewrite its wartime past in the new school textbooks.

The government had decided two years ago to delete or rewrite references to 1945 Battle of Okinawa in the history books, where the military apparently forced the civilians into mass suicides faced with defeat.

According to new reports, education officials have agreed to restore the passages in new books, but it will not contain the word “forced” in the context of the Imperial Army”s role in the suicides.

Instead, the wording has been delicately rephrased to state less directly that people were “driven to suicides amid the Japanese military”s involvement”.

“It must be proved that descriptions in textbooks impose troubles to study when we approve revisions. There is no problem in the description that the military was involved,” the Telegraph quoted a senior official at the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology as telling a newspaper.

The historians who have long urged the government to accurately depict the version of events widely accepted according to historical research. (ANI)

Decline of CO2-gobbling plankton coincided with global cooling 33 mln yrs ago

Washington, Jan 9 (ANI): A new study has revealed that after a sudden rise in species numbers, carbon-dioxide (CO2) gobbling plankton known as diatoms abruptly declined about 33 million years ago, trends that coincided with severe global cooling.

According to a report in Cornell Chronicle Online, the research casts doubt on the long-held theory that diatoms’ success was tied to an influx of nutrients into the oceans from the rise of grasslands about 18 million years ago.

New evidence from a study led by graduate student Dan Rabosky of Cornell’s Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology takes into account a widespread problem in paleontology: that younger fossils are easier to find than older ones.

“We just tried to address the simple fact that the number of available fossils is colossally greater from recent time periods than from earlier time periods,” Rabosky said. “It’s a pretty standard correction in some fields, but it hasn’t been applied to planktonic paleontology up till now,” he added.

More than 90 percent of known diatom fossils are younger than 18 million years.

So, an unadjusted survey of diatom fossils suggests that more diatom species were alive in the recent past than 18 million years ago.

To find an ancient fossil, scientists first have to find ancient sediment – and that’s no easy task because plate tectonics constantly shift the ocean floor, fossils and all.

Much of the seafloor is simply too young to sample.

So, Rabosky and co-author Ulf Sorhannus of Edinboro University of Pennsylvania controlled for how many samples had been taken from each million-year period of the Earth’s history, going back 40 million years.

After reanalysis, the long-accepted boom in diatoms over the last 18 million years disappeared. In its place was a slow recent rise, with a much more dramatic increase and decline at the end of the Eocene epoch, about 33 million years ago.

With the new timeline, diatoms achieved their peak diversity at least 10 million years before grasslands became commonplace.

“If there was a truly significant change in diatom diversity at all, it happened 30 million years ago,” Rabosky said.

According to Rabosky, although the new results don’t explain the current prevalence of diatoms in the ocean, whatever led to diatoms’ rise at the end of the Eocene, the tiny organisms may have contributed to the global cooling that followed.

“Why diatom diversity peaked for 4 to 5 million years and then dropped is a big mystery,” Rabosky said. “But it corresponds with a period when the global climate swung from hothouse to icehouse,” he added. (ANI)

Genetic evidence indicates first Americans arrived as two separate migrations

 Genetic evidence indicates first Americans arrived as two separate migrations  Washington, Jan 9 (ANI): In a new study, genetic evidence has revealed that the first Americans arrived as two separate migrations, traveling in different groups to arrive in their new home at about the same time.

After the Last Glacial Maximum some 15,000 to 17,000 years ago, one group entered North America from Beringia following the ice-free Pacific coastline, while another traversed an open land corridor between two ice sheets to arrive directly into the region east of the Rocky Mountains.

Those first Americans later gave rise to almost all modern Native American groups of North, Central, and South America, according to researchers from Universita di Pavia, Italy.

“Recent data based on archeological evidence and environmental records suggest that humans entered the Americas from Beringia as early as 15,000 years ago, and the dispersal occurred along the deglaciated Pacific coastline,” said Antonio Torroni of Universita di Pavia, Italy.

“Our study now reveals a novel alternative scenario: Two almost concomitant paths of migration, both from Beringia about 15,000 to 17,000 years ago, led to the dispersal of Paleo-Indians—the first Americans,” he explained.

Such a dual origin for Paleo-Indians has major implications for all disciplines involved in Native American studies.

For instance, it implies that there is no compelling reason to presume that a single language family was carried along with the first migrants.

When Columbus reached the Americas in 1492, Native American occupation stretched from the Bering Strait to Tierra del Fuego.

Those native populations encompassed extraordinary linguistic and cultural diversity, which has fueled extensive debate among experts over their interrelationships and origins.

Recently, molecular genetics, together with archaeology and linguistics, has begun to provide some insights.

In the new study, Ugo Perego and Alessandro Achilli of Torroni’s team analyzed mitochondrial DNA from two rare haplogroups, meaning mitochondrial types that share a common maternal ancestor.

Mitochondria are cellular components with their own DNA that allow scientists to trace ancestry and migration because they are passed on directly from mother to child over generations.

Their results show that the haplogroup called D4h3 spread from Beringia into the Americas along the Pacific coastal route, rapidly reaching Tierra del Fuego.

The other haplogroup, X2a, spread at about the same time through the ice-free corridor between the Laurentide and Cordilleran Ice Sheets and remained restricted to North America.

“A dual origin for the first Americans is a striking novelty from the genetic point of view and makes plausible a scenario positing that within a rather short period of time, there may have been several entries into the Americas from a dynamically changing Beringian source,” the researchers concluded. (ANI)