
In Detail:
Early in 2010 the head of a large genetics lab in the U.S.
contacted the Starchild Project and suggested that he could
attempt to use a recovery technique called modified “shotgun”
sequencing to isolate the Starchild’s nuclear DNA. This is the
same nuclear DNA that could not be recovered during six attempts
in an extensive DNA test conducted by Trace Genetics in 2003.
Trace Genetics used what was available then: long human-only
primers made from many thousands of base pairs strung together.
The new refined shotgun technique could recover much shorter
strings of as little as 200 to 500 base pairs long. Where primers are
like a single bullet, the new technique is like a spray of
shotgun pellets, giving a much better chance to hit a result.
The geneticist was certain that if the skull’s nuclear DNA was
still viable, then, human or not, he could recover it.
A sample of the Starchild Skull’s bone was provided, and in a
few weeks the geneticist reported some incredible results. Not
only had he recovered substantial amounts of nuclear DNA, he had
also made a historic discovery when he attempted to catalogue
his results. The gel sheet below shows an unmistakable recovery
of its nuclear DNA, showing more than a half-dozen strings between
1000 and 2000 base pairs long.

Gel sheet showing the
recovery of the Starchild Skull's Nuclear DNA
Whenever a geneticist wants to have an unknown sequence of DNA
analyzed, they send it for analysis to the
enormous genetic database located at the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
in Maryland. That public-access
database is a centralized repository of all the genomic data accumulated
by U.S. government funded research, and it now covers every phylum on
Earth, from various kinds of viruses and
bacteria, to various kinds of crustaceans and fish, to all kinds of
animals and plants, including primates and humans.
Our geneticist sent several samples of the Starchild’s nuclear DNA
to be compared with trillions of recorded sequences at the NIH. Below we
see a report summary returned by the NIH Basic Logical Alignment Search
Tool (BLAST).

BLAST report on the
Starchild Skull's Nuclear DNA
In this report we see
that one length of 265 base pairs from the Starchild Skull’s nuclear DNA
matches perfectly with a gene on human chromosome 1. This verifies that
at least some of the nuclear DNA from the Starchild is from a human
being.
In the next screen shot (below) a string of 342 base pairs recovered
from the Starchild Skull was analyzed. This time the result reads: "No
significant similarity found. For reasons why, click here.”
Those “reasons why” are an automatically generated list of possible
procedural errors designed to help geneticists check all possible flaws
in their testing techniques. Our geneticist has verified his procedures
and replicated his results, indicating that no such mistakes were made.

BLAST report on the
Starchild Skull's Nuclear DNA
To have recovered a string of base
pairs 342 nucleotides long with NO reference in the NIH database is
astounding because it means there is NO known earthly corollary for
what has been analyzed!
Please understand that these
results have now been repeated and verified several times. Strings of
Starchild DNA over 3000 base pairs long have failed to match with
anything in the NIH database. Despite that, skeptics will be obligated
by their positions to try to say it is some kind of genetic gibberish or
a mistake made during the analysis process. Why? Because, in the words
of philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer: “Every truth passes through three
stages. First it is ridiculed. Second it is violently opposed. Third it
is accepted as being self-evident.”
Luckily, any protest can easily be overcome with continued repetition
and reproduction of results, isolating more and more unique fragments to
add to the library of data already being created from Starchild DNA.
Our geneticist is confident that complete confirmation will unfold over
the following months as the Starchild Skull’s entire genome is recovered
using advanced sequencing technology. Ultimately, he will be able to
formally announce that he has absolute, ironclad proof that a
significant part of the Starchild's genome cannot be found on Earth.